Saturday, December 12, 2015

Who comes first - the ANC or the Zuma Family



Axed finance minister, Nhlanhla Nene is an African National Congress (ANC) Member and a former MK cadre, but most important is that Nene was a gatekeeper to the looting and as finance minister responsible for the country’s finances. 


Nene stopped the finance for SAA and Zuma’s “friend” Dudu. The money bailout was madness, and Nene had every right to say NO. Next on the Zuma attack list is Cyril Ramaphosa, and anybody who defies the man on his own mission.

Dudu, an astute business woman who will oil the wheels for a tender deal to move faster and run to protector Zuma when people try and stop the nonsense. Zuma said the ANC comes first, not the country. It is no longer so, it is Zuma and friends first, and then the ANC and who cares about the country.

ANC have two types of supporters, the intellectually vulnerable and those on the gravy train. The gravy train is so heavy there is no room left. The unemployment figures rise annually, corruption and crime are uncontrollable. The government is raiding the taxes, and the economy is at a critical point, evolving into a situation that will lead to irreversible development.


The sacking of Nene demonstrated that Zuma does not care about the common good, but only about his survival. Zuma is really nothing, yet just as ambitious as the people who need favors and who return favors to him. It is no longer relevant to connect to the smaller serious people like Shaik Shabeer; Zuma now hobnobs with the Guptas, who will sink the country through sheer greed.
Zuma has betrayed his oath of office and if the ANC does not stop him, the country must.

Claus Tlhapane said:
I wonder if people who say Zuma was within his Constitutional right to suddenly remove Nhlanhla Nene as finance minister has bothered to read Section 83 (c) of the same Constitution. That Section says, "The President - Promotes. . . That which advances the republic."
Now, are these people saying waiting for the markets to close and using your Constitutional prerogative to take an action that sends the republic's markets on a tailspin, decimating the value of the Rand and the banks and in the process destroying the wealth of citizens who own shares in banks is just fine?

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