<div dir="ltr"><h1>eThekwini mayor: All councillors must speak Zulu</h1><div class="gmail-publish-date"><span class="gmail-article-category">Politics</span><span class="gmail-date"><span> / </span><span>21 September 2016, 11:16am</span></span></div><span class="gmail-byline"><div>Sihle Manda</div></span><div class="gmail-article-lead gmail-article-body"><p>Durban
- English-speaking eThekwini councillors might soon have to take Zulu
lessons if they are to stay abreast of city developments.</p>
<p>That is if the wishes of new eThekwini mayor Zandile Gumede are anything to go by.</p></div><div class="gmail-article-lead-image"><img src="http://classic.iol.co.za/polopoly_fs/inlpicscopy-of-nm-zandile-gumede1-1.2070977%21/image/3353607766.jpg_gen/derivatives/box_501/3353607766.jpg" alt=""><div class="gmail-image-caption-container"><span class="gmail-image-caption">eThekwini
mayor Zandile Gumede has told councillors that Zulu-speaking
councillors should be able to express their views in meetings without
being stopped for interpretations. Picture: Sibonelo Ngcobo. </span><span class="gmail-image-credit"><span>Credit: </span><span> INDEPENDENT MEDIA</span></span></div></div><p>Gumede,
chairing her first executive committee meeting on Tuesday after her
election last month, told councillors that Zulu-speaking councillors
should be able to express their views in meetings without being stopped
for interpretations. Their English-speaking counterparts would have to
get a crash course in Zulu if they were not to be left behind.</p>
<p>Tuesday’s meeting was for the election of chairs of committees.</p>
<p>Addressing Speaker Lekgoa Mapena, Gumede said: “As this council we
have approved our language policy... May we be assisted to make sure our
mother tongue is encouraged. Even me as the mayor, sometimes I really
love to use it.”</p>
<p>This was because not everyone knew how to speak English, including “our president” Jacob Zuma, she said.</p>
<p>“I feel really good when I use it (Zulu). Even in this exco... it
must happen officially across the board, in all committees. For us, I
don’t think it must get to a point where councillors request
interpretations in committees, it must be a norm (that councillors speak
Zulu),” she said.</p>
<p>“If I feel like I want to switch to isiZulu when speaking to (Heinz)
De Boer (DA councillor), I can be able to do so; he must make it a point
that he learns the language. We must really, really do this.”</p>
<p>She shot down DA provincial and eThekwini caucus leader Zwakele
Mncwango when he tried to comment on matter, saying the topic had not
been up for discussion but was a comment directed at Mapena.</p>
<p>Approached for comment, Mncwango said there was “nothing wrong with
councillors speaking isiZulu in meetings” but bemoaned Gumede’s
approach.</p>
<p>“IsiZulu is an official language. And I do understand that some of
them (councillors) have a challenge expressing themselves in English,”
he said. Where Gumede was wrong, he said, was to say those who did not
understand Zulu must go and learn if they wanted to hear what had been
said.</p>
<p>“The language policy says there must be an interpreter in meetings’,” he pointed out.</p>
<p>The aim of the of the policy was to “encourage and support citizens
to learn official languages other than their own, which will assist in
achieving and sustaining national unity and cultural diversity”.</p>
<p>The policy states English and Zulu are the council’s two “working
languages” and may be used in “any debate and other proceedings of the
council and its committees”.</p>
<p>However, during the sittings, the policy adds, “there should be
provision for interpreting services into either of the working
languages”.</p>
<p>“In the event of any member wishing to have the proceedings
interpreted into a language other than the working languages, such
member must give adequate notice of the need for interpretation to the
chairperson of council or the relevant committee.”</p>
<p>Mdu Nkosi of the IFP considered Gumede’s statement to be “reckless” and “irresponsible”.</p>
<p>“We have English-speaking secretaries and other officials who all do not understand isiZulu. What happens to them?</p>
<p>“We need to be responsible as leaders, you just can’t utter such words,” he said.</p>
<p>Councillor Zama Sokhabase was elected as chairwoman of the Community
Services committee; Barbara Fontein will chair the Governance and Human
Resources committee; Sipho Kaunda, deputy mayor Fawzia Peer and Mondli
Mthembu will chair the Economic Development and Planning, Security and
Emergency Services committee and the Human Settlements and
Infrastructure committees, respectively.</p><p><a href="http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/ethekwini-mayor-all-councillors-must-speak-zulu-2070978">http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/ethekwini-mayor-all-councillors-must-speak-zulu-2070978</a><br></p><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature">**************************************<br>N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to its members<br>and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner or sponsor of the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who disagree with a message are encouraged to post a rebuttal, and to write directly to the original sender of any offensive message. A copy of this may be forwarded to this list as well. (H. Schiffman, Moderator)<br><br>For more information about the lgpolicy-list, go to <a href="https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/" target="_blank">https://groups.sas.upenn.edu/mailman/</a><br>listinfo/lgpolicy-list<br>*******************************************</div>
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