Daily News

MKP cries foul: In KZN, what happened to our votes?

- WILLEM PHUNGULA willem.phungula@inl.co.za

THE umkhonto wesizwe Party (MKP) in Kwazulu-natal says it has gathered enough evidence to prove that last week’s elections were manipulate­d to prevent the party from securing above 45% of the vote in the province.

The party said this was done to allow the DA and ANC coalition nationally which could filter through provinces. The MKP has since rejected the results and demanded a manual recount.

The MKP has warned the electoral body, saying it would be a provocatio­n if the Electoral Commission of South Africa (IEC) were to declare the results free and fair despite objections.

A senior member of the party, Phumlani Mfeka, who also heads the socio-political pan-africanist group Injeje yabenguni, said the party had obtained enough informatio­n on vote rigging to back up its claims.

He said in the uthukela district in the north-west of KZN the MKP did not appear in the results at all, despite many people voting for the party. It was practicall­y impossible to find a polling station, let alone a district, without a single vote for the MKP, he said.

The party also shared with the Daily News several ballot paper slips from the Ugu (South Coast) and King Cetshwayo districts (North Coast) which it said were either not uploaded in the IEC results board or numbers of the party were altered.

“We have evidence to prove that the elections were rigged. We have results slips from voting stations where the MKP did well but which were not sent to the results centre to be tallied, so we were clearly robbed,” Mfeka said.

The party was aware that the plan was to ensure that the MKP did not secure more than 45% of the vote in KZN, to force coalitions that would leave it out. Mfeka also named two IEC officials who he said were behind the rigging of votes.

The MKP’S claims were backed by the Education Union of South Africa (Eusa) which called for IEC commission­ers to be jailed for treason, incitement of violence, and destabilis­ing the state, in a statement issued by the union on Saturday.

“Eusa wishes to thank all the teachers, workers, lecturers, students, unemployed citizens, and ordinary South Africans for adhering to our call to vote (for the) MK Party as a vehicle for change.

“We remain 100% behind the MK Party to marshal all citizens to prosperity and developmen­t. The country is on the verge of chaos and despair due to the IEC’S failure to conduct an honest and transparen­t process of the counting and capturing of votes.

“Eusa objects to a biased IEC that is manipulati­ng all election processes to favour the ANC at the expense of other political parties. Evidence in possession of party agencies and the media suggests that an act of treason has been committed.

“These pieces of evidence need independen­t forensic investigat­ion to test the truthfulne­ss and material facts. It can never be that the people’s decision is replaced by criminal manipulati­on to doctor the results of the election,” read the statement.

The union said it supported the MKP’S call for a manual recounting and reconcilin­g of each VD result while a swift investigat­ion was being undertaken.

On social media, people were questionin­g why the MKP had been static at 44% since Thursday and said they suspected foul play by the IEC.

The IEC provincial spokespers­on Thabani Ngwira said all grievances were to be addressed by the provincial election head, Ntombifuth­i Masinga, when she declared the results last night.

The ANC provincial secretary dismissed MKP’S claims, saying they were making excuses after realising that their imaginary two-thirds majority could not be reached.

In response to MKP threats of violence, ministers in the security cluster yesterday announced that all state law enforcemen­t agencies were combat-ready to quell any form of violence.

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