Sport and Recreation Minister Makhenkesi Stofile on Thursday slammed the ”re-emergence of the erstwhile ambassadors of apartheid” in South African rugby.
Stofile was responding to a public campaign launched by AfriForm and a group of former Springbok rugby captains on Tuesday when they handed over a petition to the SA Rugby president, Oregan Hoskins, calling for an end to political interference in the sport.
Among those participating in the campaign were Wynand Claasen, Theuns Stofberg, Hannes Marais, Abie Malan and Johan Claasen, whom the minister described as ”beneficiaries and ambassadors of apartheid”.
”… all of them have willingly wheeled and oiled the apartheid wagon. Their campaigns in New Zealand, South Africa and elsewhere, especially the 1981 tour of New Zealand, caused unforgettable pain and rupture in countries of the world. It prolonged our suffering and segregation,” Stofile said in a statement.
”We regret this apparent rattling of the skeletons in the apartheid cupboard. Their gaunt eyes of injustice seem jaundiced in their interpretation of issues and in their selection of battlefields.”
He said they would not be allowed to re-impose their political will on South African rugby in their attempt to protect the benefits of apartheid bequeathed to their children.
Stofile added that anyone implying that newly appointed Springbok coach Peter De Villiers was hired because of the colour of his skin was either an ”imbecile or a downright mischief maker”.
”They must be treated with the contempt they deserve,” he said.
AfriForm on Tuesday told Hoskins that ”political interference and race-based policies in rugby” contravened the rugby union’s constitution as well as regulations of the International Rugby Board and the International Olympic Committee. – Sapa