I’ll take back my words when Malema proves his innocence – EFF MP
Thembinkosi Rawula has told the CIC's lawyers to provide documentation proving that each allegation he made is false.
Thembinkosi Rawula of the EFF. Picture: YouTube screenshot
Economic Freedom Fighters MP Thembinkosi Rawula said he would not retract the allegations he had made against party leader Julius Malema last week, unless he could provide documentation proving his innocence.
This comes after Malema’s lawyers demanded that he retract his allegations against the party’s two top leaders.
Responding to Malema’s lawyers, Rawula said he would retract the allegations he made on social media only if Malema provided evidence proving him wrong.
This included four-year audited bank statements form all their accounts with all the invoices and slips and agenda items and minutes demonstrating that the party’s treasurer-general had been reporting about the EFF finances.
He must also provide evidence that he had not used the party funds for his own personal use.
If the party’s stance on his allegations was that he was bitter because he did not make the candidate list, Rawula challenged the EFF to provide records showing how the candidates were nominated and also explain why he was excluded.
He said: “Please give substantive evidence that prove that the exclusion of myself from the parliament list was not pre-meditated by you and your deputy president and had nothing to do with your prejudice against me as the result my views on VBS in the last CCT meeting before the list conference.
“Kindly provide criteria for the deployment to the national parliament over and above nomination and explain how myself could not meet the criteria to demonstrate the EFF democratic process, which has been the final barometer to the exclusion of myself.”
“If this was not unfair exclusion bordering on grounds of prejudice and marginalisation and abuse of power. Please explain and provide evidence [for] what informed it? Against what objective criteria?”
Though he received criticism after admitting in an interview with Power FM that he had no evidence of some of his allegations, Rawula said he only meant hard copy evidence.
Read the rest of his response below:
On Friday, Rawula had called Malema and his deputy president Floyd Shivambu “the pair”, and alleged the EFF was like a “financial fishing net” for them, “an antithesis of everything they support”.
Rawula made sweeping and damaging allegations against both party leaders, Malema in particular, including that he had admitted in a party meeting to taking money from the now liquidated VBS Mutual Bank.
“The political overview of Julius Malema in the most recent CCT meeting admitted to EFF taking VBS money to finance the revolution. In fact, [Malema] said, ‘sometimes we are forced to kiss dogs or devil to get funding’. The VBS money was done under the full knowledge of the leadership,” he claimed.
The EFF subsequently dismissed his allegations as lies driven by his not having made the nominations cut to return to parliament again this year.
Speaking on eNCA, party spokesperson Mbuyiseni Ndlozi defended their parliamentary list process and denied they had excluded Rawula due to him asking uncomfortable questions about Malema and Shivambu’s alleged involvement in VBS bank looting. He called Rawula a “position monger” who was throwing a tantrum and lying about his organisation and had joined “propagandists” against the EFF.
Ndlozi said 1,000 names had been nominated for the EFF candidate list at the start, and the 200 who were selected to go to parliament had been chosen democratically by EFF branches.
The MP, who was sworn into parliament for the EFF in late 2015, admitted that he had long had reservations about his leaders, but had kept quiet about them due to allegedly needing to retain his seat in the National Assembly amid the fear of being fired. However, after he learnt he hadn’t made the EFF’s candidate list to parliament for this year’s national elections, he was free to speak his mind.
In his long post, he alleged, among other things, that Malema and Shivambu had been abusing millions in party funds, particularly from the levies the party imposed on its elected representatives and constituency funds received from Treasury.
“All these monies are centralised in the EFF under the control, abuse and dictatorship of Julius Malema and Floyd Shivambu. This pair has made it clear, this is their organisation, and all of you have come to join us, not the other way round.”
He listed a number of alleged methods his party leaders used to gain personal access to money from legislatures and parliament, thus supposedly sidestepping Treasury laws.
Rawula argued that the “scandal of VBS has put the EFF cardinal pillar number 7 [anti-corruption] on trial in the court of the public opinion. The EFF will have a tough time to remedy itself to the poor grannies of Limpopo and the country as the whole.”
Rawula told eNCA he was not speaking out over bitterness, but because he wanted the truth known and because he wanted to speak out against corruption.
“At some point, one has to speak the truth.”
He said it was well known that he had always raised the issue of VBS within the party, but without success. He admitted that he had received a letter from Malema’s lawyers demanding that he retract all his public statements against him. Although it was not stated, the implication was that Malema may have been threatening to sue for defamation.
(Compiled by Vhahangwele Nemakonde, Additional reporting by Charles Cilliers)
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