Attachment 17: The African National Congress in government
Besides the fact that no governance handed over by succession since the illegal formation of the Union of South Africa can be seen as legal because its power has been handed over to it by a preceding illegal government, we need to ask:
Is the African National Congress capable of running South Africa?
Does the history of the African National Congress warrant its position as governor of South Africa?
To address these pertinent questions, we need to discover if the African National Congress has proven itself to have the best interests of the country as a nation as its primary concern; and
How the African National Congress has utilized power and funds entrusted to its care historically.
In this attachment, we discuss:
Part 1: The attitude of the African National Congress towards South Africans as a nation before it became the government;
Part 2: The attitude of the African National Congress towards South Africans in its leadership position as being the government;
Part 3: How the African National Congress managed the power and funds entrusted to its care during the liberation struggle before it came into power as government of South Africa.
The Union of South Africa, which was completed in 1910 through which the British Crown annexed all of South African land and placed South Africans under British governance, was illegal as the majority of South Africans did not agree to the formulation of this Union. The control of South Africa by British governance was handed down in succession to British loyal officials up to and including the present leadership within the African National Congress, as discussed in Attachment 10 - South Africa is bound as a possession by the British Crown.
Before the African National Congress took control of South Africa as government officials, national and international outrage against the previous system of governance since 1910 was widely publicized. This is discussed in Attachment 9 - Objections to the formation of the Union of South Africa.
There has not been a legal government in South Africa since 1902. The African National Congress inherited an illegal system, which was corrupt, and has proven that they are not able to rectify the system to the benefit of the nation.
Is the African National Congress capable of running South Africa?
Does the history of the African National Congress warrant its position as governor of South Africa?
To address these pertinent questions, we need to discover if the African National Congress has proven itself to have the best interests of the country as a nation as its primary concern; and
How the African National Congress has utilized power and funds entrusted to its care historically.
In this attachment, we discuss:
Part 1: The attitude of the African National Congress towards South Africans as a nation before it became the government;
Part 2: The attitude of the African National Congress towards South Africans in its leadership position as being the government;
Part 3: How the African National Congress managed the power and funds entrusted to its care during the liberation struggle before it came into power as government of South Africa.
The Union of South Africa, which was completed in 1910 through which the British Crown annexed all of South African land and placed South Africans under British governance, was illegal as the majority of South Africans did not agree to the formulation of this Union. The control of South Africa by British governance was handed down in succession to British loyal officials up to and including the present leadership within the African National Congress, as discussed in Attachment 10 - South Africa is bound as a possession by the British Crown.
Before the African National Congress took control of South Africa as government officials, national and international outrage against the previous system of governance since 1910 was widely publicized. This is discussed in Attachment 9 - Objections to the formation of the Union of South Africa.
There has not been a legal government in South Africa since 1902. The African National Congress inherited an illegal system, which was corrupt, and has proven that they are not able to rectify the system to the benefit of the nation.
Index to Attachment 17, extract from Bundle 7
Attachment 17 document, extract from Bundle 7
attachment_17_the_african_national_congress_in_government.docx | |
File Size: | 379 kb |
File Type: | docx |