Radical
South African lawmaker Julius Malema delivered a blistering attack on
President Jacob Zuma in his maiden address to parliament on Wednesday,
accusing him of being “extremely scared of white people”, AFP reports.
Dressed in red overalls and Wellington
boots, Malema called on the president to seize white-owned lands without
compensation, nationalise the mines and banks, and tear down statues of
white colonisers.
“You lack courage and have sold out the
revolution,” the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters told a
stony-faced Zuma in his response to the president’s state of the nation
address Tuesday.
Malema has explained previously that he
and his lawmakers wear the Wellington boots favoured by many workers to
prove they represent the poor.
Malema formed the EFF last year after
being thrown out as youth leader of Zuma’s ruling African National
Congress, and led his party to win 25 parliamentary seats in May 7
elections.
His direct verbal attack on Zuma, 72,
and several of his cabinet colleagues, caused uproar and he was
repeatedly called to order.
Malema heaped scorn on Zuma’s promise to
introduce “radical socio-economic change” to tackle unemployment and
poverty, saying the ANC of the late liberation icon Nelson Mandela was
now part of an “elite pact” that “sucks up” to whites.
“You don’t have what it takes to lead the struggle for economic liberation of the black majority,” he said.
Mandela led the ANC to victory in the
country’s first multiracial elections in 1994, which brought an end to
white-minority rule and the racist system of apartheid.
Now, Malema said, “the ANC is part of an elite pact that seeks to protect white monopoly capital and white minority privileges”.
Addressing Zuma directly, he added: “You are extremely scared of white people, particularly white monopoly capital.”
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