Cape Times

Buthelezi’s ruthless power-mongering

- YONELA MLAMBO Mlambo is a UCT student

THE suppositio­n that epistemic knowledge production is neutral and not biased has been rigorously debunked and further critically engaged.

Epistemic knowledge production is situated and has locality, and the knower situation is evident in the known.

The same is true and can be said about the South African negotiatio­n discourse; it is situated and has locality.

The public discourse about the South African negotiatio­ns is situated in polarising the “ethnic” violence between AmaZulu and AmaXhosa.

During the violence that erupted in KwaZulu-Natal and Johannesbu­rg during the negotiatio­ns for a democratic South Africa, our media largely portrayed the IFP and ANC political conflict as if it was ethnic violence between AmaZulu and AmaXhosa instead of it being a political war between the IFP and the ANC.

To understand that the political war was between the IFP and the ANC, and that the IFP was never the mouthpiece of AmaZulu, we have to understand the establishm­ent of the IFP, and how the IFP appropriat­ed upon itself an exclusive position to be the voice of AmaZulu.

Firstly, Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi (IFP Emeritus President) appropriat­ed the late Zulu King's cultural organisati­on called Inkatha ka Zulu to reach his own political ends and to fulfil his power-mongering desires. His Majesty King Solomon establishe­d Inkatha ka Zulu to revive the AmaZulu culture which Prince Buthelezi appropriat­ed for his political ends' ambitions.

That is why IFP became largely associated with the voice of AmaZulu.

Prince Buthelezi invented his own history in which he is of the family that is traditiona­lly responsibl­e for providing AmaZulu nation with traditiona­l Prime Ministers.

However, history disputes Prince Buthelezi's claims that his family is traditiona­lly responsibl­e for providing AmaZulu Kings with traditiona­l Prime Ministers.

For instance, King Shaka kaSenzanga­khona's Prime Minister was Ngomane who was from the Mthethwa tribe, King Dingane's Prime Minister was

Ndlela kaSompisi from the Ntuli tribe, King Mpande's Prime Minister was Masiphula kaMamba whose surname was Ntshangase, King Cetshwayo's Prime Minister was Chief Mnyamana Prince Buthelezi's great-grandfathe­r, and King Dinizulu's Prime Minister was Mankuluman­a.

Even if Prince Buthelezi's family is traditiona­lly responsibl­e for providing the AmaZulu Kings with traditiona­l Prime Ministers he is not the rightful heir to be the AmaZulu traditiona­l Prime Minister.

Therefore, the assertions that Prince Mangosuthu's family is traditiona­lly responsibl­e for providing the AmaZulu nation with traditiona­l Prime Ministers are not true.

If they were true Prince Buthelezi would not have been excluded from the Zulu royal family affairs from 19681970.

Nonetheles­s, had it been true that Prince Buthelezi's family is traditiona­lly responsibl­e for providing the Zulu nation with its prime minister, his older half-brother Prince Mceleli would have been the AmaZulu traditiona­l Prime Minister.

In the 1980s the then KwaZulu territory was not spared from the popular political unrest against the apartheid regime.

For instance, students from the townships of KwaMashu and Umlazi joined the popular nationwide protests against the apartheid regime and the Bantustan states and their collaborat­or leaders.

Prince Buthelezi intervened, urging the students to end the protest, but little did he know that the students were not going to take heed of his plea and unequivoca­lly rejected the indoctrina­ting Inkatha course.

Prince Buthelezi then had to re-strategise to claim the ground that it seemed like he was gradually losing, i.e. self-proclaimed AmaZulu leader.

The Indians in Durban were at the receiving end of Prince Buthelezi accusation­s that they had influenced AmaZulu to protest and thus he warned the Indians to stop interferin­g with KwaZulu schools or face the consequenc­es.

Prince Mangosuthu is notorious for shifting the blame to outside influence whenever AmaZulu challenged him. For instance, Prince Mangosuthu is on record as accusing Rev Mcebisi Xundu as a Xhosa misleading AmaZulu.

Alas, the AmaZulu have a leader who has appropriat­ed the authority to be their voice yet publicly undermined their intelligen­ce to think for themselves and to decide what they deem to be right or wrong.

It was rather shocking for a person whose ancestors' settlement in Zululand can be located to a certain historical period to make bold claims about what behaviour is a pure constituti­ve feature of a Zulu person and/ or a behaviour.

Nonetheles­s, we must not allow the previous statement to detain us here. Prince Buthelezi is further on record for being hyper -cognizant when his power is waning and mastered the art of making allegation­s about claims of being a political target.

In the 1970s Prince Buthelezi once made accusation­s that King Zwelithini involved himself in political activities.

Such allegation­s warranted Prince Buthelezi censoring the King and threatened a reduction in the late King's salary.

History informs us that Prince Buthelezi was willing to stoop to any level to run a smear campaign against his political opponents that sought to challenge his self-appropriat­ed position of being AmaZulu voice thus the Inala Party and the Umkhonto ka Shaka political party did not live long enough and the IFP and its vigilantes emerged as the mouthpiece for AmaZulu.

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