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Fikile Mbalula

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Preceded by
  
Makhenkesi Stofile

Name
  
Fikile Mbalula


Spouse
  
Nozuko Mbalula

Party
  
African National Congress

Fikile Mbalula Minister Mbalula honours our sporting stars SASCOC SASCOC

Born
  
8 April 1971 (age 53) Adelaide, Eastern Cape (
1971-04-08
)

Political party
  
African National Congress

Role
  
South African Deputy Minister of Police

Education
  
Free State College of Education (1988)

Office
  
South African Deputy Minister of Police since 2009

Similar People
  
Jacob Zuma, Julius Malema, Malusi Gigaba, Thabo Mbeki, Danny Jordaan

Profiles

Fikile mbalula chewing chappies in circus parliament


Fikile April Mbalula (born 8 April 1979 in the Free State) is the Minister of Police in the Cabinet of South Africa, a former deputy minister of police, a member of the national executive committee of the African National Congress and former leader of the African National Congress Youth League.

Contents

Fikile Mbalula Gareth Cliff and Fikile Mbalula in credibility Twar eNCA

#INAUGURATION19 I Fikile Mbalula


Career

Fikile Mbalula Youth Village 10 Reasons Why Sports Minister Fikile

Mbalula was appointed Deputy Minister of Police in the cabinet of Jacob Zuma in May 2009 and later became the Minister of Sport and Recreation after President Jacob Zuma changed his cabinet. On 31 March 2017 following a controversial reshuffling in the cabinet, Mbalula was appointed as Minister of Police taking over from Nathi Nhleko after lobbying from the ANC Youth League and possibly as a reward for loyalty towards Zuma, according to media speculation.

In the 2009 general elections he was the manager of the ANC election campaign, which was considered highly successful.

Mbalula was elected to the ANC NEC at the party's Polokwane conference in December 2007 in 15th place, measured in number of votes. He subsequently retired as president of the ANC Youth League of which, at age 36, he was no longer eligible to be a member.

Mbalula was elected president of the ANC Youth League in August 2004, having previously held the post of secretary general.

Mbalula has been credited with installing South African President Thabo Mbeki in that position, and for later deposing him as head of the ANC. His support has also been described as key in gaining Zuma the ANC presidency in a hard-fought race with Mbeki.

He also supported the candidacy of Julius Malema to succeed him as head of the Youth League in what was seen as a move to ensure continuing League support for Zuma.

Apart from politics, he is an ardent supporter of the Kaizer Chiefs Football Club, and the "Minister of Twitter".

Controversial statements

Known for his disregard for speaking conventions, Mbalula has several times made headlines with controversial statements. In June 2007 he likened the University of KwaZulu-Natal to Bombay, saying black students were left on the periphery while those of Indian descent swelled the ranks.

In December 2007, amid rising tensions in the run-up to the ANC's Polokwane conference, Mbalula wrote a letter to finance minister Trevor Manuel calling him arrogant and an "attention-seeking drama queen". This followed Manuel dismissing Mbalula as a "self-appointed spokesperson of the national democratic revolution".

In April 2008 Mbalula said that Barney Pityana, rector of the University of South Africa, had "made a clown of himself by his overzealous confusion and comical postulations" after Pityana expressed criticism of Zuma.

In January 2014, after Bafana Bafana were eliminated in the first round from the CHAN competition, Mbalula said that the national team were "a bunch of losers".

He also once at a public meeting (in the presence of the media) chanted the Springboks rugby team on, ahead of their overseas tour, with the words "Donner hulle...bliksem hulle", to which the audience of supporters erupted in cheers.

On 25 April 2016, he suspended the privileges of SA Rugby, Cricket South Africa and Athletics SA from bidding for international tournaments due to lack of transformation.

References

Fikile Mbalula Wikipedia


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