As the ruling Party is readying itself for the
December Conference there is a matter I feel I
should mention.
I refer here to my concern about the consolidation
of reconciliation between the ANC and the IFP. On
the 26th of April this year Professor Herbert
Vilakazi delivered a lecture in Durban on the
relations between our two organisations. He also
proposed a way forward. He invited leaders and
members of both the ANC and the IFP. The leaders of
the ANC just like those of the IFP promised to
attend. However by the time the lecture was
delivered leaders of the ANC in the Province were
conspicuous by their absence. Only IFP’s top
leadership attended.
There was a debate in ‘The Sowetan’ newspaper on the
proposals by Professor Vilakazi. It was not
surprising that it had to be Professor Ben Magubane
who tried to put a spanner into the works. That was
bad as he has been given the task of writing the
contemporary history of the liberation struggle by
the President of the ANC. However as far as the
Province of KwaZulu Natal is concerned which was the
theatre of the war of attrition between members of
the UDF/ANC and members of the IFP it was remarkable
that someone in Premier Sibusiso Ndebele’s office
Professor Musa Xulu wrote a long article in ‘The
Sowetan’ shouting down Professor Vilakazi’s
proposals.
It is now clear that he was probably acting on the
instructions of Premier Ndebele. This is the
impression one gets when reading a leader page
article this week by the Premier in which he is
reacting to my address at the recent annual
Conference of the IFP. His reaction reminded me
that the leadership of the ANC in the Province has
always been opposed to any reconciliation between
members of the ANC and the IFP. On the 29th of
January 1991 delegations of the ANC leadership and
the IFP leadership, led by President Mandela and
myself met in Durban.
We reached an agreement that both Mr Mandela and I
should from that date address joint Rallies in the
Province and in Gauteng attended by members of both
organisations. An opportunity presented itself when
I was invited to address a rally at Taylors Halt in
Pietermaritzburg. I proposed to Mr Mandela that Mr
Mandela and myself should use the opportunity to
address a Joint Rally of members of both
organisations.
Mr Mandela agreed. However just before we were due
to appear together at the Joint Rally, I heard that
Mr Mandela was no longer attending the Rally. When
I phoned Mr Mandela to verify the rumour he told me
that the then leader of the ANC in the Province Mr
Harry Gwala had arrived at the ANC Head Office in
Johannesburg with a busload of ANC leaders from the
Province of KwaZulu Natal to tell him not to address
the Joint Rally at Taylors Halt with me. So that
never happened. It has not happened even when the
IFP invited the ANC to join the Coalition government
of the Province after winning the elections in
1994. It has not happened to this day. Although
this was supposed to be a Coalition government it
never brought any real reconciliation between the
ANC and the IFP. In the national government where I
worked under the Presidency of President Mandela and
later-on under President Mbeki there was more
rapport and camaraderie between us as members of the
same Cabinet. That is apart from the Billy Masethla
debacle. It was not surprising that in 1999 when
President Mbeki had decided that I should work with
him as Deputy-President of the Country that the
whole thing aborted because of the attitude of the
ANC leaders in the Province. President Mbeki told
me that the ANC leaders in the Province of KwaZulu
Natal forced him to demand from me that if I took
the position of the Deputy President, I should give
the position of Premier in KwaZulu Natal to the
ANC. They knew that there was no way that I could
accept such a thing. So the whole thing fell
through because they did not want me to be
Deputy-President.
There are too many agreements, too numerous to
mention that were concluded between the ANC and the
IFP in KwaZulu Natal which have all been broken by
the ANC. The worst of these is that when the ANC
received more votes than the IFP in the 2004
election they told us that this marked the end of a
Coalition government between us. That the
government was now the ANC government. That the IFP
would be in it only by the courtesy of the ANC. So
three of our members of Parliament were invited into
Mr Ndebele’s Cabinet. One of them later resigned
for personal reasons and two remained. There was
appointed an ANC/IFP Committee of 3 which was
supposed to deal with any problems that arose
between the two organisations. In August 2005
Premier Ndebele was interviewed by ‘The Sunday
Tribune’ newspaper. Among other things he mentioned
that he was concerned about the fact that the state
of relations between him and myself were not what
they should be.
In August 2006, the Premier held a gathering which
they call Imbizos at Mondlo. I was also invited.
In my presentation I tried to respond to the
concerns that the Premier had expressed in his
‘Sunday Tribune’ article about the state of
relations between us. The Premier then expressed
his intention to visit me at my home at
Kwaphindangene. I was shortly thereafter approached
by both the Director-General Professor Mandla Mchunu
and the Director in charge of Liaison in the
Premier’s office Rev Vundla for a date for a meeting
between me and the Premier to be scheduled on the
22nd of September 2006 in the Premier’s office in
Ulundi. And that we could only go to my home for
Refreshments after our discussion in the office. In
our discussions with the Premier we were dealing
with the issue of relations between me and the
Premier and his government. Among the things I
quoted to the Premier was an incident which
indicated how bad the state of our relations was,
and that was the manner in which my daughter
Sibuyiselwe had been treated. That she was
discriminated against because she was my daughter.
She had been appointed to a position on merit under
Minister Narend Singh who was an IFP Minister. He
signed the document confirming her appointment
before he left Cabinet. When the new ANC Minister
Ms Weziwe Thusi was appointed to replace Mr Singh,
she froze my daughter’s appointment. She was quite
open to some people that she could not countenance a
situation where my daughter being my daughter was
appointed to a position dealing with Security in her
Department. My daughter was not going to be in
charge of the Minister’s personal Security. I had
mentioned this matter to the Deputy-President of the
ANC Mr Jacob Zuma in Greytown during the Inkosi
Bhambatha Celebrations in the presence of the
Minister concerned.
Mr Zuma asked her to sort the matter out. As this
was in May and it was now August, and it had not
been sorted out, I then mentioned it again to
Premier Ndebele in his capacity as Head of
government and leader of the ANC in the Province of
KwaZulu Natal. The Premier reacted to my plea by
instructing the Director-General, Professor Mandla
Mchunu who was present at our meeting to tell the
Minister under whom my daughter worked to sort out
the matter. Later on the Director-General told me
that the Minister was defiant and stated that she
was not prepared to accept the instructions of the
Premier. My daughter eventually had to resign.
Our meeting was cordial and after our meeting I
entertained the Premier in keeping with his status,
and in accordance with our Zulu culture.
Everything went off splendidly. But to my great
shock just about a month after such a cordial
meeting I was told by the two IFP Ministers, who
were still in the Provincial government that they
had received letters from the Premier delivered by
the Director-General Professor Mandla Mchunu, firing
them from his Cabinet with effect from the 1st of
November, the following day. There was not as much
as a notice given or some courtesy explaining to me
after our cordial meeting the previous month.
At this year’s annual Conference of my Party I
reported these things that happened since our last
Conference and one of them was my daughter’s case
and the way she was treated. Premier Ndebele has
written a leader page article in one of our
Province’s main newspapers lambasting me for
mentioning my daughter’s case at the Conference. He
makes this an ethical issue in these words: “At an
ethical level it would be acutely embarrassing if an
ANC leader were to go to a Conference to complain
that he had intervened on behalf of his daughter to
be employed in government”. If it were not so sad,
it would be laughable that I should be taught
lessons in ethics by people who have victimised my
daughter, because she was a daughter of their
political opponent. That is the ethical issue. My
daughter had been appointed on merit by the Minister
in charge at the time. She was a Captain in the
police and later did a Bachelor of Laws Degree when
she had left the Police and worked in another
Provincial government department.
The diatribe that the Premier has written about me
and the erstwhile KwaZulu government is an
indication of how important what Professor Vilakazi
was trying to do in encouraging some rapprochement
in the lecture he delivered in April.
The erstwhile government of KwaZulu which I headed
was the most poorly funded by Pretoria because of my
opposition to the balkanisation of our Country into
”independent” mini-states. Premier Ndebele does not
want to face facts. I mobilised the people of this
Province of all races against apartheid. We are the
only Province which had a non-racial Government
structure before 1994, the KwaZulu Natal Joint
Executive Authority where both the KwaZulu
Government and the Provincial government combined to
serve all the people of this Province. President de
Klerk admitted before the TRC that it was my
rejection of independence which made them to abandon
grandiose Apartheid.
I commissioned the well-known firm of Chartered
Accountants De Loitte and Touché and they did a
survey which came out with the report that on a per
capita basis we were less funded as a government
than any other territorial government in South
Africa. And yet the things that we accomplished
speak for themselves. We built thousands of
class-rooms on the basis of a rand for a Rand basis
consonant with our belief in self-help and
self-reliance. We built several Teacher Training
Colleges all over the Province which the ruling
Party closed down. We built several Houses in many
townships and helped many budding entrepreneurs to
start their own businesses through KwaZulu Finance
and Investment Corporation. We founded the ITHALA
BANK which is unique in the whole Country. It is
today misused to help more the elite than the people
for whom we founded it.
Inkosi Albert Mvumbi Luthuli was my leader and
mentor. Of all the leaders that are living today
there is no one amongst the living leaders who
worked as closely with him more than I did. I
delivered the oration at his funeral requested to do
so by both his family and the ANC Mission-in-exile.
The Luthuli Memorial Foundation in London
Chairperson Dr Zami Conco requested me to help his
widow Mama Nokukhanya Luthuli to make arrangements
for the unveiling of his tombstone at Groutville
Mission Graveyard. When Inkosi Luthuli was given a
post-humous OAU Award, his widow and family
requested me to accompany her to Maseru where she
received the Award on behalf of her deceased husband
from King Moshoeshoe II who presented it on behalf
of the OAU. I spoke on behalf of Mrs Luthuli and
the people of South Africa. Premier Ndebele ends
his diatribe with the words: “As we commemorate 40
years of Luthuli’s death would it not be a fitting
Tribute to say his children are at last working
together to achieve ideals advocated by him.” It is
Premier Ndebele and the leadership of the ANC in
this Province who have made sure that such a thing
will never happen by the way they have treated me
and the IFP.
Yours sincerely,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP