Senzo Mchunu outlines how ANC KZN structures manipulated
News24 |
20 September 2017
Former Premier says changing venues at last moment or giving out false times common tactics
Former KZN premier outlines 'processes of corruption' in local ANC structures
20 September 2017
Durban – Former KwaZulu-Natal premier Senzo Mchunu has highlighted various methods used to corrupt voting processes in local structures of the ANC.
Mchunu was speaking on Wednesday at the Moerane Commission on political killings that have plagued the province since 2011.
According to Mchunu, various methods are used to manipulate voting processes for councillor positions within the ruling party.
He said a key strategy used by unscrupulous members wanting to ensure victory at local level was disinformation.
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"Sometimes you can tell someone that a meeting is starting in the morning, but you are actually having the meeting in the evening."
He said that changing venues at the last minute was also a popular tactic.
"You will find that they will say a meeting is in one spot. Thereafter they change the venue but only inform one faction."
Mchunu added that many chairpersons at local level meetings often used their authority to influence the outcomes of voting processes in meetings by manipulating the numbers so that when lists for councillor positions were compiled, it was not the legitimate results that were used.
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Mchunu said that many of the meetings also had bouncers in attendance.
"The bouncers also come in the form of security companies. They are directed by certain people and they kick out those they do not want in the meetings because they fear it will cause them to lose."
He said some leaders also used their influence within the government in meetings.
"They also call police saying there are people that need to be [expelled from the meeting]. Depending on your influence with police, you will get those people intimidated or removed."
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He said when positions within the organisation became available they became a factor for potential violence.
ANC provincial spokesperson Mdumiseni Ntuli was not immediately available for comment. - News24
Slow police action contributes to political killings
Political killings, such as the murder of former ANCYL leader Sindiso Magaqa, could be avoided or investigated more efficiently if police officers in KwaZulu-Natal were more proactive, Senzo Mchunu also told the commission on Wednesday.
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"They must be proactive and prevent [incidents from happening]. We know police are humans too. Not all crime can be prevented. This is when they must investigate and bring criminals to justice. This will also send a strong message to criminals."
Mchunu said Magaqa was killed for attempting to fight corruption.
"That man was fighting corruption and he was killed for it. He was shot in the day, in a public place. Not at night, in an alley."
He questioned why police did not look for the car that Magaqa’s shooters were travelling in and why there was no co-ordination in an attempt to catch the shooters.
Magaqa died at the Albert Luthuli Hospital in Durban on September 4 from gunshot wounds he had sustained in a suspected ambush in July.
'Poor reaction'
It is alleged the motive for his killing involved a corrupt tender for the construction of a hall in Umzimkhulu, where he was a ward councillor.
During his testimony, Mchunu said there needed to be effective policing prior to incidents taking place.
He also chided police for their "poor reaction" after his personal bodyguard was killed.
He told the commission that, two years after Xolani Nkosi’s 2015 death, he had received minimal communication from police on the matter. This was partly why the public harboured a poor perception of the police, he said.
Following Nkosi’s death, Mchunu said he received very little information from authorities on investigations for weeks.
He said that he had learnt that a police unit in Pietermartizburg was taking over the case. However, after some time passed, he realised "they were not going to brief me".
Mchunu then took things into his own hands, using his political clout to call up then minister of police Nathi Nhleko. He asked Nhleko to assign two senior officers to the case.
'Police suspected me of the murder'
He also hired a private investigator to work with the officers, the commission heard.
"For weeks, police had no information for me. But these three men were giving me feedback on clues and made progress on the first day of investigations."
A few days after the investigator and the two officers appointed by Mthethwa began doing the work, Mchunu said he was surprised to hear that he was considered a suspected in the matter.
"They had discovered that the Pietermaritzburg police had suspected me of the murder."
However, Mchunu had been in Ladysmith at the time of the killing. Nkosi was killed in Empangeni.
Mchunu said that, after a few days of investigations, the trio were hot on the heels of potential suspects, even tracing Nkosi’s phone.
However, after the Hawks took over, the case quickly went cold.
"To this day, they have not updated us on his matter."
'They fumble around and forget about the murder'
Poor communication with affected parties, and what appeared as a lack of effort in following up on cases, were some of the other reasons which gave the public a poor perception of the police, he said.
"If the premier of the province of the time could not get help, how does the public expect to get any help?"
He said that police had to change those perceptions and become more organised.
"They do not decide from the beginning that this is a serious case. The docket moves from one hand to the next and they confuse themselves by suspecting those who could not have committed crimes. They fumble around and forget about the murder."