THE South African Communist Party (SACP) in KwaZulu-Natal has added its voice to calls for a dedicated police team to be established to investigate the "contract-killing industry" in the province, after the murder of two more African National Congress (ANC) branch leaders on the south coast on Sunday night.
There has been a spate of murders of political leaders in the province over the past year, mostly of ANC and National Freedom Party (NFP) leaders at branch level, and most cases remain unsolved.
"It is high time that … people put their heads together irrespective of political affiliation and come up with a strategy of ridding the province of the contract-killing industry," SACP Moses Mabhida provincial secretary Themba Mthembu said on Monday.
ANC provincial secretary Sihle Zikalala said that Oshabeni branch chairman Dumisani Malunga and branch secretary Bheki Chiliza had been shot and killed on Sunday night after a meeting. Political analyst Protas Madlala said the killings come barely two weeks after political parties in KwaZulu-Natal had held a joint summit to find ways to end politically motivated killings.
"We are very concerned with the killing of our comrades. This is unacceptable and cannot be tolerated," Mr Zikalala said.
Police spokesman Capt Thulani Zwane said no arrests were made. In July, ANC councillor Wandile Mkhize was murdered in a drive-by shooting near his home in Margate. Nhlakanipho Shabane, who was with him at the time, spent three weeks in a coma before dying in hospital. Two men have been charged in these murders.
Since the beginning of last year the NFP has lost 21 members to assassinations, which appear to be politically motivated. Mr Madlala said political leadership at local government level represented easy access to wealth in areas where unemployment was high and this might be behind the spate of murders. He said the latest killings did not appear to be linked to the election of new ANC leaders in Mangaung at the end of the year, as KwaZulu-Natal was the one province that was united in its support of the current administration. Mr Mthembu said the SACP in KwaZulu-Natal also firmly supported the current leadership. Mr Madlala said there was an "industry of people earning a living from this". Such people were also likely to have been involved in taxiindustry related killings. "Where is the intelligence in all of this?"
In eThekwini, the ANC’s biggest region in terms of number of branches, the cost of providing protection such as bodyguards for city councillors rose to R18m in the 2012-13 financial year from R2m the year before, and the city wants to increase this allocation even more.
Source: Business Day
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