On Now
Weekends 09:00 - 12:00
The Central SA Top 30 Nolwethu
NEXT: 12:00 - 16:00 Saterdag Siësta with Laurika
Listen Live Streams

National

With Zille gone, EFF only credible opposition party - Malema

───   05:28 Fri, 24 Apr 2015

With Zille gone, EFF only credible opposition party - Malema | News Article

Durban - Helen Zille's decision to step down as DA leader has left the EFF as the only credible opposition to the ruling ANC.

That is according to EFF leader Julius Malema, who said during an interview on the radio station Gagasi FM on Thursday that Mmusi Maimane, the leading candidate to take control of the DA, was better suited to being a priest.
 
“Now with Helen Zille gone, we are alone. It’s us and the ANC,” he said during the hour-long interview.
 
“I think that Mmusi can make a very good priest. He is a priest; he’s not a politician. We are over the moon as the EFF because we will not have a serious competition from Helen to Mmusi. It’s now us and the ANC.”
 
Malema said he did not owe the South African Revenue Service (SARS) any money and that he there was no contradiction with him demanding that President Jacob Zuma pay back the money spent on upgrades to his Nkandla residence.
 
Malema said that he had paid his tax and that the demand was for Zuma to repay taxpayer’s money.
 
“All what I owed them, I paid them. I paid R4m and then with the assets they have taken from me they should have collected from me R7.5m.”
 
He told Gagasi FM listeners that he believed that SARS was “politically driven”.
 
“SARS used to be the most respected institution. Now it is on record that SARS is corrupt and that SARS gets involved in illegal activities, including tapping phones of people, including leaking tax affairs of people to the media, including spying on other politicians on behalf of other politicians.”
 
He said that he had been required to pay his tax, but unlike Zuma, he had not taken money from the taxpayer.
 
“The reality is that I paid them and I didn’t take taxpayers money. I’m paying tax. You pay your tax. I pay my tax. The man [Zuma] went to take from the tax coffers. I didn’t take from the tax coffers,” he said.
 
Malema said that xenophobia had no place in South Africa.
 
He is expected to be in the Durban area for the next four days attending various community meetings, speaking to students, with his visit culminating in a rally in KwaMashu on April 27.
 
-News24.com

@ 2024 OFM - All rights reserved Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | We Use Cookies - OFM is a division of Central Media Group (PTY) LTD.