Malema questions state security’s ‘wrong’ shutdown intelligence

EFF leader Julius Malema has questioned the strength of the South African intelligence community following President Cyril Ramaphosa’s deployment of the army for a month.
Ramaphosa deployed the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) in the wake of fears that the recent EFF’s national shutdown might result in anarchy characterised by looting, vandalism and loss of life.

The deployment of more than 3 000 SANDF members will cost the taxpayers R160-million, according to the government
notice to parliament.


However, Malema has slated intelligence operatives for allegedly misinforming the president, a move that has resulted in fruitless and wasteful expenditure. “We are in parliament and we will be questioning the rationality and the deployment of soldiers and the amount of monies that are going to be spent on the soldiers that are on the streets now.

“From its beginning, the national shutdown was declared it was going to be one day, and as to a month’s deployment, I don’t understand what informs that. Dealing with the criminals that we are dealing with, (it) might be an opportunity for them to loot.
“In the army, ordinarily, and in many instances, we never get to the bottom of how money gets spent. That is where it is very easy for a corrupt government to exploit that opportunity and steal the money,” Malema said.

The red berets’ leader said although they did not want to undermine the South African army, Ramaphosa ought to have been better informed.

“It is for the South Africans to see that we have no president at all. We have no crime intelligence. We have no state security and we have no army intelligence because someone should have said to them, ‘stop being jokes’. We started together when we were announcing the national shutdown. We announced it through you. Not once have we ever started talking about violence.”

It is not the first time that the effectiveness of the South African intelligence community has come into question. In July 2021, looting and destruction of property took place in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, resulting in the deaths of more than 300 people.

The riots, or what has been termed the July Unrest, followed the imprisonment of former president Jacob Zuma by the Constitutional Court, which was accessed directly on behalf of State Capture Commission chairperson Justice Raymond Zondo.

Zuma was sentenced to prison for 15 months but served two months.
The damage to infrastructure was estimated at R50-billion, leading to the South African Human Rights Commission warning that such events should never be repeated.

It was widely reported that security cluster was found wanting, with ministers blaming each other for failing to communicate effectively about the riots before they happened.
The current National Assembly speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula swapped positions with current Defence Minister Thandi Modise in a cabinet reshuffle meant to appease angry South Africans.

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