Government spokesperson Jimmy Manyi on Wednesday said he would not comment on an open letter by Minister in the Presidency Trevor Manuel in which he was labelled a “racist”.
“I’m not going to say a word. Not a word,” Manyi told the South African Press Association.
In the open letter, which was published in the Mercury newspaper, Manuel hit out at Manyi over his comments on coloured people.
“I want to draw your attention to the fact that your statements about ‘an over-concentration of coloureds’ are against the letter and spirit of the South African Constitution, as well as being against the values espoused by the Black Management Forum since its inception,” Manuel wrote in the letter.
“I want to put it to you that these statements would make you a racist in the mould of HF Verwoed.”
Manyi, then the director general of the Department of Labour, said in a show broadcast on KykNet’s Robinson Regstreeks in March 2010 that there was an “over supply” of coloureds in the Western Cape.
The ANC distanced itself from Manyi’s remarks, saying they were “disturbing” and “unacceptable”.
Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) deputy chief executive officer Vusi Mona had since apologised for the remarks on Manyi’s behalf.
‘What did YOU do in the war?’
Manuel wrote that the fact that Mona had issued an apology for Manyi’s remarks showed ” … that you [Manyi] lack the moral conviction to publicly apologise says so much about your acute lack of judgement”.
“Mr Manyi, you may be black, or perhaps you aren’t, because you do not accept that label and would prefer to be ‘only a Xhosa’, whatever the label you choose, I want to put it to you that your behaviour is of the worst-order racist.”
Manuel said that because of Manyi’s comments the government was being asked to explain what “was in the mind” of drafters of the amendments to the Employment Equity Bill.
“Now, in the light of the utterances you have made at a time when you were the DG of the department of labour, and given the fact that the amendments to the Employment Equity Act were drafted during your tenure, I have a sense that your racism has infiltrated the highest echelons of the government.”
Manuel pointed out to Manyi that the “coloureds” were the sons and daughters of those who had fought anti-colonial battles and made huge sacrifices in the struggle against apartheid.
“By the way, what did YOU do in the war, Jimmy?” he asked.
Manuel ended off the letter with: “I now know who Nelson Mandela was talking about when he said in the dock that he had fought against white domination and that he had fought against black domination. Jimmy, he was talking about fighting against people like you.”