Nelson Mandela’s king has entered into a public feud with South Africa’s president Jacob Zuma.
Buyelekhaya
Dalindyebo’s greatest claim to fame is that he counts South Africa’s
first black president among his subjects and feels current president
Jacob Zuma isn’t any different.
The
king of Mandela’s AbaThembu clan made local headlines Thursday with a
string of invective against Zuma, so blunt that members of his own
entourage reportedly gasped.
Dalindyebo
lashed out at Zuma as he delivered a letter to the president’s Pretoria
office Wednesday. The king, who also visited Mandela in the hospital
this week, reported that Mandela looked good, had recognised Dalindyebo
and had responded with his eyes.
Zuma
also stopped by the hospital, and issued a statement saying that
Mandela continues to respond to treatment but remains in a critical
condition 34 days into his hospital stay.
Dalindyebo
is involved in a very public feud with Zuma, amid reports that the
government is in the process of withdrawing its recognition of him as a
king for unseemly behaviour.
The
marijuana-smoking monarch is appealing a 2009 conviction and 15-year
jail sentence for assault, kidnapping and culpable homicide. The charges
relate to a dispute with some of his subjects dating back to the
mid-1990s, when he is accused of kidnapping a woman and her six
children, setting their home on fire and beating up four youths, one of
whom died.
At
a prayer meeting for Mandela last month, Dalindyebo said he would stop
smoking dagga, a local term for marijuana, when Zuma stopped being
corrupt.
Accusing
Zuma of trying to oust him, he delivered a letter Wednesday at the
Union Buildings in Pretoria, where the presidency is located, warning
Zuma not to interfere in royal affairs. Security officials refused to
grant him access to the building.
Dalindyebo
was quoted as saying that the president “flushes people like condoms”
and announced his intention to leave the governing African National
Congress and join the opposition. He went on to accuse Zuma of lying and
failing to use condoms, a reference to evidence Zuma provided in a 2006
r*pe case in which he was acquitted.
The
king also apparently breached the ANC’s policy against promoting tribal
divisions, describing the president as “just a Zulu boy”.
“I
cannot be ordered to come to his office. He must come to my office. I
am king unto him and he is just a Zulu boy,” Dalindyebo told reporters.
In
a country where opposing the country’s top politician has cost many ANC
figures their careers, few doubt that Dalindyebo is on his way out.
The
country’s traditional rulers are recognised by the constitution,
supported by government funds, allowed to impose fees on local
communities and play an important part in the lives of many South
Africans.
But
Dalindyebo, who at one point announced his kingdom’s secession to avoid
jail time, is seen as disreputable among traditional leaders. His
brother, Daludumo Mtirara, is on record as refusing to recognise
Dalindyebo as king.
“The
family are waiting for the government to process the documents
confirming that he has been removed,” Mtirara said on Sunday. “Once the
government has done its work, the royal family will sit and identify a
suitable candidate to take over as king, as is our custom.”
Dalindyebo
last week announced he was ousting Mandela’s grandson Mandla as a clan
chief after a family court battle over the location of the graves of
Mandela’s three deceased children. Mandla Mandela, who was chosen by his
grandfather to be chief, had moved the bodies to his village, Mvezo. He
lost the court battle and was ordered last week to send them back to
their original resting place in nearby Qunu.
Mandla Mandela has accused Dalindyebo of being delusional following the announcement of his removal.
“Whatever thing he is smoking these days has worsened his thinking capabilities,” he was quoted as saying.
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