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19 January 2012
Following last week's statement from our
former National Organiser Mr Albert Mncwango that he was
resigning with immediate effect from the position of National
Organiser and the Party's response to it, some sections of the
media have created a very unfair and untruthful picture that the
IFP is in a crisis, which sees many leaders leaving the Party.
Those who advance this unfortunate theory
quote Mrs Zanele KaMagwaza Msibi, Mr Thulasizwe Buthelezi, Dr
Bonginkosi Buthelezi, Rev Musa Zondi and Mr Mncwango as leaders
who have ditched the Party, which in their view proves that
indeed the IFP is in a crisis.
As a member of the Party assigned the duty of
Deputy National Spokesperson, I feel compelled to respond to
these wrong perceptions which have the potential to sow
confusion and despondency among the ranks of our Party, in the
hope that those who are spreading them will desist.
I want to show that these conclusions are
nothing but utter lies, spread by those who have misinterpreted
- deliberately or not - what has happened in the IFP. I will
look at each case to show that these leaders cannot be lumped
together as though their cases are the same.
a) Mrs KaMagwaza Msibi lost her case in a
Court of Law. Her intention was not to leave the IFP; rather she
hoped that the Court would force the party to convene the
national conference. Having failed in court, she ran away to the
NFP, instead of coming back to face the issues that awaited her
in the party's National Council of which she was the
Chairperson.
b) Mr Thulasizwe Buthelezi resigned from all
leadership positions because he wanted to pursue other
interests.
c) Dr Bonginkosi Buthelezi likewise resigned
from all leadership positions because he wanted to pursue other
interests.
d) Rev Zondi is still the IFP's
Secretary-General, Member of the NEC, National Council and
Parliament. He has not resigned from any position. All he said
was that he will serve the Party in all his positions until the
Conference when his term will in any case be coming to the end.
He will not then be available to stand for any position
thereafter.
e) Mr Mncwango is still a member of the
National Council and Parliament. He has not left any position.
What happened was that he was asked to step down from the
position of National Organiser because the party wanted to
employ someone who will work in that position full-time.
From all these factual accounts it is clear
that it is disingenuous for anyone to lump all of these leaders
together as though they did one and the same thing. Of the five,
only one is no longer in the IFP, Mrs KaMagwaza Msibi. Only two
left their positions; the Buthelezis. The last two senior
leaders are still very much part of all IFP activities.
Lastly, even if all these individual had
deserted the Party, it would still be a biased hyperbole to say
that the IFP is in a crisis of losing many leaders, because the
IFP's highest leadership organ besides the Conference - the
National Council - consists of just less than a hundred leaders.
Five out of about a hundred cannot, by any stretch of imagination,
be said to be many to the extent of signalling a crisis. I hope
this clarification will dispel the mist that obviously confuses
some in the media. Unless it is part of a deliberate campaign to
ensure the death of the IFP.
Issued by: M. Joshua Mazibuko
IFP Deputy National Spokesperson
Contact: 083 992 6135.
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