While a loyal leader of the ANC with deep roots in the liberation struggle, Msimang has over the past decade been a vocal critic of his party, lending his voice on matters pertaining to “corruption and its harmful by-products of nepotism and incompetence”.
His resignation comes barely four months after he was elected deputy president of the ANC Veterans League.
“Constructive” interventions and guidance from the veterans, he said, were met with censure, a shoulder shrug and a promise to do something about it. “At worst, those who seek change by raising voices endure slurs, or are met with downright hostility.”
The resignation letter became public just hours after Mbalula accused the veterans of “decampaigning” the ANC saying : “On a daily basis our veterans are attacking the leadership while we have availed ourselves to them.”
In his blistering critique of the ANC, Msimang highlights, as a direct failure of the ANC, poverty and unemployment that has reduced citizens to beggars who live in shacks. However, he insists “they are not beggars of course, for that is not their identity, they are human beings who have been forced to sacrifice their dignity in part because of my party’s successive failures”.
Veteran Mavuso Msimang quits the ANC
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Image: FREDDY MAVUNDA
After more than six decades in the ANC, Mavuso Msimang has quit the governing party in protest against a “shameful” record of governance and its consequences that have rendered millions of South Africans destitute.
The struggle stalwart, in a resignation letter addressed to party secretary-general Fikile Mbalula, described ANC rule as a calamity that he could no longer invest his energies on.
“When we took over the government in 1994, we had the moral high ground, and the conviction that we would be able to root out the old-boy networks that had benefited from, and strangled, the apartheid economy.
“Yet, three decades later, the ANC’s own track record of corruption is a cause of great shame. The corruption we once decried is now part of our movement’s DNA. This has had dire consequences for the most vulnerable members of our society,” he said.
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While a loyal leader of the ANC with deep roots in the liberation struggle, Msimang has over the past decade been a vocal critic of his party, lending his voice on matters pertaining to “corruption and its harmful by-products of nepotism and incompetence”.
His resignation comes barely four months after he was elected deputy president of the ANC Veterans League.
“Constructive” interventions and guidance from the veterans, he said, were met with censure, a shoulder shrug and a promise to do something about it. “At worst, those who seek change by raising voices endure slurs, or are met with downright hostility.”
The resignation letter became public just hours after Mbalula accused the veterans of “decampaigning” the ANC saying : “On a daily basis our veterans are attacking the leadership while we have availed ourselves to them.”
In his blistering critique of the ANC, Msimang highlights, as a direct failure of the ANC, poverty and unemployment that has reduced citizens to beggars who live in shacks. However, he insists “they are not beggars of course, for that is not their identity, they are human beings who have been forced to sacrifice their dignity in part because of my party’s successive failures”.
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He likened the ANC government to a self-serving organisation where “people die before ambulances can reach them, or perish in the hallways of overflowing, under-resourced public hospitals, children continue to be exposed to the risk of dropping into pit latrines in poorly equipped state schools and dying horrendous and humiliating deaths, who miss classes when streams and rivers are in flood because there are no bridges”.
And while millions suffer, “ANC leaders publicly proclaim ownership of obscenely wealthy homesteads and other possessions and send their children to the best schools in the land”.
Msimang cited the following as examples of “glaring” ANC government failures:
“Inexplicably, you have ministers who attack the very private sector the president is inviting to be an essential part of a social compact in a programme to rebuild our economy and enable higher growth.
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“You do not need to dig too deeply to discover that most of the country’s failures are linked to corruption somewhere in the system: a tender that should never have been awarded, a job that should have gone to a better qualified, more deserving and less factionally-aligned person. This is happening on the watch of the ANC government,” said Msimang.
He said the “litany of economic and social woes — crime, unemployment, destitution — associated with my beloved ANC is not only embarrassing, but also defies enumeration”.
He suggested the ANC was failing to heed warnings that signs of its own decline were attributable to widely held perceptions that its members and “deployees” are corrupt, that the organisation has a high tolerance threshold for venality, and that the deployment of unsuitable people accounts for the government’s deplorable levels of service to the public.
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While Msimang resigned his membership of the ANC, he expressed hope and affirmed his commitment to South Africans and its people.
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