"#ZumaMustFall” campaign finds its origins from the DA
As proud citizens of South Africa with a clear conviction of a construction of a non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and prosperous society, we are stunned by the level of arrogance of the “right-wing” forces, particularly in Cape Town. Historically, Cape Town is an entry point of colonialism and brains behind apartheid policies. However, the evolution of South African society informed by the painful struggles of our people ushered a democratic breakthrough in 1994.
This was a historic moment full of possibilities to many while the handful few saw it as a threat to their colonial-apartheid privileges. As we ushered democratic order in 1994 with a clear mind of inclusive society, the few (mainly white) who have not accepted democratic dispensation found refuge in Cape Town, the majority of whom found a political home in the Democratic Alliance (DA).
This gave Cape Town a status of the “most racial divided city in the country” while the DA gained itself a status of a “political entity of white supremacy”. The racial divide agenda in Cape Town was therefore maintained and further boosted by the ascendance of DA into power, thus an institutionalisation of racial policies. It will be absurd to delink the “Zuma Must Fall” lobby from the politics of our country, particularly as we know that the failed “#Zuma Must Fall” campaign finds its origins from the DA.
The massive ZUMA MUST FALL banner erected in the corner of Buitenkant and Kloof Street in Cape Town, which has since been removed by foot soldiers of our revolution is another desperate attempts to delegitimise Peoples’ Power. It risks eroding our democratic values and replacing them with undemocratic practices similar to those of colonial-apartheid South Africa.
This campaign is an attack to the democratically elected government led by the African National Congress (ANC) as legitimised by the massive support of South Africans, the majority of which are black. It seeks to entrench “white supremacy" by the “rightwing-liberal forces who have not internalised our democracy and continue dreaming of a South African version of the “Arab Spring”. These forces dream of a social discord that could degenerate into lawlessness, thus directly attacking the State.