President Jacob Zuma said he will not sacrifice himself to "monopoly capital" by resigning.
Addressing the ANC Youth League’s (ANCYL) economic freedom lecture in
Durban on Wednesday‚ Zuma recalled a time that he was watching the news
— something he said he hardly did — when he saw a foreign chamber
demanding that he step down.
"You know‚ I listen to the news at times‚ at times I don’t. I heard
some chamber from outside of this country demanding the president must
go and some big business who also said so‚" he said.
"And I realised it’s more the time that I will never on my own
resign‚ because if I do so‚ I would be surrendering to the monopoly
capital."
Zuma said no one has told him what wrong he has done‚ except repeating that he was corrupt.
"I ask what is it that I have done wrong. I even ask
those who said I have done wrong but they run out of answers. The only
answer is the repetition: corruption‚ corruption‚ corruption — until our
own comrades also repeat by saying corruption‚" he said.
He told the Youth League that its call for economic freedom had always been the call of the mother body.
He
said a similar call was made during the Morogoro consultative
conference in 1969‚ and said it was a policy of the ANC to strive
towards the total emancipation of the black people.
"The policies
of the ANC are there to solve our problems. All we need is
implementation and to liberate ourselves. I urge you to take these
discussions about the economy more seriously and to worry yourself about
the plight of the black people ... in our country".
Zuma said
blacks were still languishing in the class struggle‚ saying the proof of
this was that the majority of those in jail were poor black people‚
while those with economic power‚ regardless of the crimes they had
committed‚ were not in jail.
"Those with economic power‚ they can
commit murder and everything‚ but they are not in jail because they have
the best legal brains to defend them. The majority of the poor are in
prison and those who have everything‚ not a single one of them is in
prison. The nation needs to be aware‚" he said.
He called on the Youth League to address these issues "more vigorously‚ properly‚ convincingly and scientifically".
"You
are talking about economy‚ you are talking about the real power. The
balance of forces is the balance of economic power in the world. If you
don’t have the economic power‚ it erodes the political power and the
security power. And those with economic power buy people with the price
they cannot say no to‚" he said.
TMG Digital/The Times/BDlive
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