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By Vhahangwele Nemakonde

Digital Deputy News Editor


Malema sues ‘stubborn’ Kunene for calling him a cockroach

Malema has used former speaker of parliament Baleka Mbete in his argument that Kunene should have apologised for using the term if he meant no harm to him.


Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema has filed papers with the Equality Court demanding that Patriotic Alliance (PA) deputy president Kenny Kunene retract and apologise for calling him a cockroach on TV in November.

Responding to Malema’s “pantiti” comments, Kunene, in a interview on eNCA, threatened to expose the EFF leader for who he is, calling him a “cockroach” and “criminal”, among other names.

He said: “I think it’s pure bitterness and jealousy. Julius has gone on to call us these names for a very long time. We have really tried to be mature and not respond to him. I’m going to deal with this little frog. Julius is just an irritating cockroach that I must now deal with publicly. I will call the press and begin to show you that Julius, whatever he criticises, he is.

“Julius is a criminal and I’m going to show South Africans the crimes he has been involved in. I’m going to tell South Africans why I left the EFF because of this cockroach. So I’m going to deal with this cockroach because we have given him time and respect. He’s got his issues, he hates himself and now he hates everybody else. He also went for the TG of the ANC, he gets personal in politics. We have stood back, but now it’s over. When I meet him, he must tell me that I’m a pantiti in my face.”

ALSO READ: Malema demands apology from Kunene over ‘hate speech’ and ‘tribalism’ – report

In court papers, Malema argues that Kunene’s description of him using the words “little frog” and “cockroach”, and his refusal to apologise, means the PA leader thinks the EFF leader deserves “sub-human treatment”.

“His attack on me and the use of that term, especially, was deliberate and intentional,” argues Malema.

The term was used to justify inhumane treated meted out on the Tutsis by the Hutus during the Rwandan genocide and became popularised as more politicians used it.

The term, according to Malema, was used to “other” the Tutsis as sub-human.

As a result, the comment should be seen as hate speech as defined by the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act.

“First he used the term to undermine my human dignity by referring to me as sub-human. This adversely affected my equal enjoymentof his rights and freedoms.

“It is hardly a stretch of the imagination that the first respondent used the term as a dog whistle, such that I should be targeted for, inter alia, my tribal ethnicity and/or social origin and/or conscience and/or belief. This he did on the sole basis of me being a political opponent and evidently based on my ethnicity.”

ALSO READ: Malema suffers another court blow against former EFF MP

According to Malema, it is equally important that the respondents are his political opponents, and also of a different ethnic group to him.

Malema used former speaker of parliament Baleka Mbete in his argument that Kunene should have apologised for using the term if he meant no harm to him.

Mbete called Malema a cockroach during a provincial elective conference in North West 2015.

She later apologised for it.

“South Africa’s polity is not immune to such instances, but unlike with Mr Kunene, most of those who uttered the offensive term apologised for it. Mr Kunene has stubbornly refused to do so. This is why I now turn to the courts,” argues the EFF leader.

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