EFF lashes out at ANC, media while honouring Madikizela-Mandela

The party believes the late struggle icon 'passed on the baton' to the red berets.


The EFF has released a statement on the passing of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. Today marks a year since the late struggle icon died after a long illness.

The party, as well as its leader Julius Malema, have sent out several tweets in honour of Madikizela-Mandela on Tuesday, with the party expressing the sentiment that the woman dubbed the “mother of the nation” “passed on the baton” of the fight for economic freedom to the party.

Malema, meanwhile, posted a picture of himself and Madikizela-Mandela together, along with the proverb “Mmago ngwana o swara thipa ka bogaleng”. This directly translates to “A mother holds the knife at the sharp end”, which could be interpreted as a comment on the struggles she endured during her lifetime or a reference to the work the “mother of the nation” did to protect her metaphorical children.

The EFF statement mainly has the purpose of remembering the late icon, describing her as a “liberator, freedom fighter, and mother of the nation”, but also sees the party vowing to fight against “patriarchy” and “toxic masculinity” and taking aim at both the ANC and the media.

READ MORE: EFF given a week to prove ‘apartheid-era Stratcom spies’ allegation

Malema accused the ruling party of having sold out Madikizela-Mandela at her memorial service last year, and the EFF statement continues with these accusations, saying the “movement united to suppress and deny her rise in the ANC”.

The statement also brings up Malema’s proposal for the Cape Town International Airport to be named after Madikizela-Mandela, which was also first mentioned at her memorial.

“It was the ANC that led the charge to reject” this proposal, the statement says, adding that the party allegedly “argued that Mama did not deserve such an honour and memory” and that they “rejected her in favour of male struggle icons”.

Turning its attention to the media, the statement argues that the “memory of Madikizela-Mandela must also remind us of the role the media played in the destruction of the lives of freedom fighters”.

The statement says it’s “a fact” that “no one suffered more in the hands of liberal and right-wing media” than Madikizela-Mandela, and that “Stratcom” tried to destroy her reputation as a freedom fighter, adding that the party believes that South African media has not yet “accepted its role” in doing so.

Stratcom was a group within the apartheid government that was specifically tasked to create and carry out disinformation campaigns.

The term has since been adopted by the party as a term to refer to the media as a whole, which the party believes is biased against them and serves white interests, with a recent statement accusing “Stratcom” of trying to make the EFF’s following look smaller than it is.

READ MORE: EFF hits out at media, accusing ‘Stratcom’ of making them look ‘small in numbers’

The use of the term seems to be spreading, too, with a statement released by the ANC reacting to allegations in Pieter Louis-Mybergh’s new book, Gangster State: Unravelling Ace Magashule’s Web of Capture – which were covered in stories by The Sunday Times, City Press, and others over the weekend – referring to the book as a “Stratcom-style fake news book”.

The EFF launched accusations against two journalists last year, Thandeka Gqubule and Anton Harber, after Winnie Madikizela-Mandela mentioned them in an interview, saying they “actually did the job for Stratcom”.

This led to the EFF issuing a statement accusing the two journalists of being Stratcom spies, which led to the party being taken to court and resulted in an order calling on the party to prove the accusations or withdraw them within a week.

While the EFF said they had simply repeated what Madikizela-Mandela said, Gqubule and Harber believed the party had a case to answer for, particularly since Madikizela-Mandela herself had never actually alleged that they were spies or on the payroll of the apartheid government. She was probably implying that, from her perspective, they had unwittingly been duped into spreading a narrative that suited the apartheid state.

(Additional reporting, Vhahangwele Nemakonde)

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