The ANC in Mpumalanga on Tuesday distanced itself from a hitlist
allegedly targeting people who stood in the way of access to World
Cup tenders.
"The ANC also wants to re-iterate its condemnation of any murder
of any person no matter what the motive can be," ANC Mpumalanga
spokesperson Paul Mbenyane said in a statement.
"Murder is murder, and a criminal deed which should be condemned
in the strongest terms possible."
Allegations that the list was crafted, funded or executed by ANC
members did not mean the party was involved, he said.
"The ANC does not kill people, but it instead mobilises them
into joining as members and rally them around its programmes that
seek to improve the standard of the lives of society."
The Sunday World reported on 10 January that two people on the
list had been assassinated for blowing the whistle on corruption in
the building of the one billion rands Mbombela Stadium, a venue for the
Fifa World Cup.
Mbombela speaker Jimmy Mohlala was shot dead outside his house
in KaNyamazane, outside Nelspruit, in January last year. Mpumalanga
arts and culture department communication director Sammy
Mpatlanyane was shot dead in his house in Nelspruit on 8 January
this year.
The province's sports and culture minister Vusi Shongwe blamed
Mpatlanyane's murder on the same people who killed Mohlala.
The Sunday World reported that it had information that both men
were on a hitlist, originally of 11 people, but which had since
grown to 20 and included Mbombela executive mayor Lassy Chiwayo and
two journalists.
The Mail & Guardian reported that Mohlala was to have testified
in the disciplinary hearing of former municipal manager Jacob
Dladla, accused of financial mismanagement of the stadium project.
Dladla had since resigned.
The newspaper reported that one of the journalists on the hit
list was believed to be Mail & Guardian sports writer Lucky
Sindane, who covered the Mohlala killing.
"Any person who can be found to be involved in criminal
activities like murder, such a person cannot be a member of the ANC
no matter what position they can be holding," Mbenyane said on
Tuesday.
"The policy of the ANC is that if a person can be found guilty
and convicted by a court of law of murder or such related crimes,
he or she automatically ceases to be a member of the ANC and that
is not subject to negotiation."
'No light being shed'
He re-iterated a call by the ANC on anyone with "tangible
information" about the hitlist and the murders to give this to the
police.
"It is disturbing that to date there is no light being shed
around the murders that have taken place more than a year ago...,"
he said.
Mpumalanga police were investigating the list, said Senior
Superintendent Sibongile Nkosi, but she could not elaborate.
On Sunday, a 25-year-old alleged contract killer accused an
influential Mpumalanga ANC leader of offering him R100 000 and a
government job if he poisoned government officials blocking access
to World Cup tenders, according to a report in the Sunday Times.
On Monday, the Lowvelder Online on Monday reported that a
hitlist had been faxed to the newspaper and to the provincial
safety and security department.
There were ten names on the list, including those of two people
who had already been murdered.
The Sunday Times report quoted Mpumalanga Democratic Alliance
leader Anthony Benadie as criticising Premier David Mabuza for his
silence on the matter.
"Why have we not heard (from) the premier on these murders, the
hit list and poisoning claims?" he asked.
"The premier is a feared man. Our constitutional democracy is at
stake if people won't talk because they are afraid of being taken
out."
The Sunday Times listed the names of at least 12 local leaders
who had died under "suspicious circumstances" in Mpumalanga since
1998, received death threats, disappeared or survived assassination
attempts.