Alexandra shutdown leader slams Solly Msimanga for opening case

08 April 2019 - 10:44
By Iavan Pijoos
Gauteng premier candidate Solly Msimanga (DA) at the Alexandra police station to lay criminal charges of incitement of violence against the ANC on April 7 2019.
Image: Solly Msimanga via Twitter Gauteng premier candidate Solly Msimanga (DA) at the Alexandra police station to lay criminal charges of incitement of violence against the ANC on April 7 2019.

The leader of the #AlexShutDown movement has slammed the DA's Gauteng premier candidate Solly Msimanga for opening a case against their action.

Msimanga claimed that the protests in Alexandra, Johannesburg, were not related to service delivery but were co-ordinated by the ANC "in order to influence the outcome of the general elections" next month. He laid a charge of incitement of violence and said in a tweet he had presented evidence to the police.

Last week several roads in Alex were blocked with rocks and burning tyres.

But the leader of the movement, Sandile Mavundla, has hit out at Msimanga. "We are not the ANC, we are the community. There is no case against the community. It is an element of the apartheid regime.

"If the community of Alexandra must be arrested on the case based on Solly's evidence, it will show that apartheid is still working in South Africa. We have the right to picket and to strike," he said.

Mavundla said they would not be deterred by the opening of the case and would go ahead with their march to Sandton - delayed to mid-morning Monday due to the morning rains.

Community members are gathering at the Alexandra stadium and are expected to march to the municipality offices in Sandton, where they will hand over a memorandum.

Johannesburg metro police department spokesperson Wayne Minnaar said the situation in Sandton was still calm. Minnaar said the M1, Grayston and Marlboro Drive are likely to be affected by the march.

Gauteng premier David Makhura is expected to visit Alexandra on Tuesday and President Cyril Ramaphosa on Thursday.