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Radebe says MPs must “find their moral compass” while Maimane says Sona was like the State vs the Nation


PARLIAMENT, February 14 (ANA) – Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe on Tuesday appealed to MPs to “find their moral compass” and help restore decorum in Parliament.

Opening the debate on President Jacob Zuma’s state of the nation address (Sona), Radebe described last week’s fist fights between Economic Freedom Fighters MPs and members of the parliamentary protection services after the former refused to leave the National Assembly chamber when ordered to do so, as “highly regrettable”.

“The members of this House must pride themselves in their excellent service to the people of this country,” he said, asking MPs to put South Africans before their political aspirations.

“The time has come for all of us to restore the dignity and decorum of this prestigious House.”

Radebe bemoaned the fact that a 12-year-old praise singer was “drowned out by heckling and jeering adults who are supposed to be leaders of South African society”, while also speaking out against profanities “spewed in this House with reckless abandon”.

Before he took to the podium, Speaker Baleka Mbete reported back to MPs on several concerns raised by MPs during last week’s Sona.

Mbete said the violent removal of the EFF MPs had been referred to the joint rules committee of Parliament for processing.

The release of a “powdery substance” in the public gallery, which affected both guests and MPs, was also under investigation, she said.

“The item was retrieved and handed to relative authorities for testing,” said Mbete.

“We confirm however that is was not teargas or pepper spray.”

She said the “small packet” was retrieved, and Parliament was still awaiting the outcome of tests to determine exactly what the substance was.

EFF leader Julius Malema’s concerns that Parliament’s protection officers were intending to use cable ties to restrain his party’s MPs was referred to the police for investigation, Mbete said.

She chided MPs who were heard shouting profanities as the drama unfolded during the Sona saying it “sets a bad example to the nation”, but said it was difficult to name these MPs as the expletives were not uttered into the microphone.

Meanwhile, the use of force against the Economic Freedom Fighters in Parliament, turned the state of the nation address (Sona) into an assault on the nation reminiscent of the apartheid regime and President Jacob Zuma into the enemy of the people, Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane said on Tuesday.

Borrowing from George Orwell to reflect on the brutality of a boot kicking the face of female MP, Maimane said the police, nevermind scores of riot police, had no place in Parliament in a democracy.

“The liberator turned oppressor. The enemy of the people. In his novel 1984, George Orwell said: ‘If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever’,” Maimane said.

“We saw a glimpse of this future on Thursday night, and it looked very much like our painful past. The police in riot gear. The deployment of the army. The screams of female Members of Parliament as they were punched and kicked. A boot stamping on a human face. South Africa will never forget what happened on Thursday.”

Turning to Zuma’s chuckle as he began his speech after the EFF had been hauled out of the chamber, Maimane added: “And we will never forget the reaction of the man at the centre of it all.

“We will never forget how he laughed… It was the laugh of the enemy of the people.”

Maimane went on to accuse Zuma of building his home at Nkandla on “the backs of the poor” and the ANC of having become the party late SACP leader Chris Hani warned against who “use the resources of this country to live in palaces and to gather riches”.

– African News Agency (ANA)