A little learning, it is said of the youth, can be dangerous. It can also be quite amusing, as we were once again reminded, here at the Mahogany Ridge, when we got our hands on a statement from the ruling party regarding the sexist insults directed at Lindiwe Mazibuko by ANC MPs during the Presidency budget vote debate.
On Tuesday, you will recall, John Jeffrey had a contemptible dig at the DA parliamentary leader's body size - ". . . while the Hon Mazibuko may be a person of substantial weight, her stature is questionable" - and, on Thursday, Buti Manamela attacked her over her dress sense.
Mazibuko tweeted her annoyance with Jeffrey: "So, my body is trending in Parliament. Last year it was my hair. When will ANC just come out & say ‘You disgust us because you're a woman'?' Unsurprisingly, Sandy Kalyan, the DA's deputy chief whip, announced that she would be writing to ANC chief whip Mathole Motshekga urging him to act against the MPs for their sexist and chauvinist behaviour.
Enter the ruling party's half-learned Little Lord Haw Haw, Moloto Mothapo, who dashed off a rather bewildering explanation for Jeffrey's remark: it was all clever word play. A pun, in fact. (It was no such thing, of course, but don't tell anybody.)
"We understand . . . that although [Jeffrey's] reference to Mazibuko during the debate . . . was a pun, it had more to do with her influence and power associated with the position she holds than her physical weight," Mothapo said. "Jeffery has carefully reflected on the ambiguity of the statement and accepts that they it may have been understood to refer to Mazibuko's physical outlook. (sic)
"In this regard, he will unconditionally withdraw the statement when the presiding officer gives him an opportunity to do so in the House and apologise to Mazibuko. We commend him for this voluntary decision. Having dedicated his life to the struggle for a non-racial, non-sexist and democratic South Africa, Jeffery finds the claim that his remarks were intended to be sexist and chauvinistic insulting and mischievous. The same pun could have been directed at even a male in similar position as Mazibuko."