Admiral swaps her navy whites for EFF reds |
Publication |
Sunday Times |
Date | 2014-06-22 |
Reporter |
Andre Jurgens |
Web Link | www.timeslive.co.za |
I’m not
going to sit in
the corner,
crumble and die
SOUTH
Africa’s first
female admiral,
whose navy
career was
torpedoed by
fraud and
assault
convictions, is
now a member of
parliament. Her
job is to
monitor how the
government
spends
taxpayers’
money.
Khanyisile
Litchfield-Tshabalala,
who attained the
rank of
rear-admiral to
widespread
acclaim, wore
red overalls in
parliament this
week when she
called for
“radical
economic
transformation”
that would put
“foreign white
monopoly capital
in its place”.
The Economic
Freedom Fighters
MP will sit on
the standing
committee on
public accounts,
or Scopa a
watchdog whose
job is to hold
government
department heads
to account for
their
expenditure.
Party leader
Julius Malema
warned on Friday
that his MPs in
parliamentary
committees would
“ask the most
difficult
questions” of
the government.
Just months
after being
named as one of
the top 10 Women
of the Year in
2007 by City
Press and
Rapport
newspapers,
Litchfield-Tshabalala
was convicted by
the Thaba
Tshwane Military
Court of
fraudulently
reporting the
theft of a
laptop computer
at a seminar in
Johannesburg and
assaulting a
subordinate who
wanted to search
her car at a
parade in
Pretoria.
The military
court sentenced
her to a fine of
R6 000 and R15
000 was deducted
from her salary
against a claim
for the stolen
laptop.
“I paid the
fine. I moved
on,” said
Litchfield-Tshabalala
on Friday. As
feisty as Malema,
her new
commander-in-chief,
she said: “I’m
not going to sit
in the corner,
crumble and die.
I’m not going to
do that.”
Parliamentary
rules exclude
the appointment
of an MP if the
candidate has
been convicted
of a crime
carrying a
sentence of
imprisonment of
a year or more
without the
option of a
fine.
The former
University of
Cape Town
honours student,
who studied for
a master’s in
criminology at
the University
of South Africa,
said that in
retrospect the
case against her
could have ended
differently had
she been
represented by
an external
lawyer and not
one from the
defence force.
“That court did
find me guilty .
. . That woman,
less than three
months after
that,
set herself on
fire the judge.
She said she was
hearing voices
and ghosts. Now
you ask yourself
what was [her]
sanity like in
the first place.
Be that as it
may, they said:
‘You are guilty,
pay the fine.’ ”
Sunday Times
sister
publication The
Times revealed
in 2010 that
Litchfield-Tshabalala
was working in
the defence
secretariat of
the South
African National
Defence Force as
a reservist
despite
regulations,
published in the
Government
Gazette, stating
that nobody with
a criminal
record could
enrol as a
reservist.
Litchfield-Tshabalala
said the fact
that she had
been recalled by
the military
showed that it
was not too
concerned
by the finding
of the military
court.
Litchfield-Tshabalala,
a former
Umkhonto weSizwe
commander in
Angola, was
among the navy
crew who sailed
the arms deal
frigate SAS
Mendi from
Germany to South
Africa.
With acknowledgement
to
Andre Jurgens and Sunday Times.
What a lovely
story.
Right out of
Africa.
Pity it's right
out of South
Africa.
Someone up there
had a great
sense of humour
when he made the
place.
Amandla.