Jomo Khasu Explained

Party:African National Congress
Office1:Member of the National Assembly
Termstart1:May 1994
Termend1:June 1999
Citizenship:South Africa
Birth Date:15 July 1961

Mahlomola Johnson "Jomo" Khasu (born 15 July 1961) is a South African politician, diplomat and civil servant who represented the African National Congress (ANC) in the National Assembly from 1994 to 1999. After that he served in the North West Provincial Legislature, where he was a member of the North West Executive Council until Premier Popo Molefe fired him in January 2001. He was a member of the United Democratic Front national executive committee during the 1980s and later served as South African Ambassador to Gabon.

Early life and activism

Khasu was born on 15 July 1961. During apartheid, he was active in political organising in the former Bophuthatswana homeland.[1] He was a member of the national executive of the United Democratic Front and was detained during the state of emergency imposed in June 1986.[2] [3] His brother, Khotso Frank Khasu, went into exile with Umkhonto we Sizwe and later became a civil servant and businessman.[4]

Legislative career

National Assembly

In South Africa's first post-apartheid elections in 1994, Khasu was elected to represent the ANC in the National Assembly, the lower house of the South African Parliament.[5] In February 1998, he was additionally co-opted as a member of the ANC National Executive Committee (NEC),[6] and he was elected as Deputy Provincial Secretary of the ANC in the North West later that year, serving under Provincial Chairperson Popo Molefe.[7]

North West Provincial Legislature

He held his seat in the National Assembly until the next general election in 1999, in which he was elected to the North West Provincial Legislature.[8] During the legislative term that followed, he served as the North West's Member of the Executive Council (MEC) for Agriculture, Conservation and Environmental Affairs.[9] By early 2001, Khasu was under investigation for misuse of his government-issued credit card: he had allegedly spent close to R80,000 of public funds on personal items, including liquor, jewellery, and a family holiday.[10]

In January 2001, Molefe, in his capacity as Premier of the North West, announced that Khasu had resigned from the Executive Council but would remain an ordinary Member of the Provincial Legislature;[11] the media presumed that Molefe had compelled him to resign. In the aftermath of the announcement, a group of ANC members wrote an anonymous open letter attacking Molefe and other members of his cabinet. The letter alleged that Molefe had fired Khasu because he viewed him as a political threat, and claimed that "none of us knew who Popo Molefe was until Jomo Khasu marketed him to us" as a candidate for ANC Provincial Chairperson in 1994.

Ahead of the expiry of his term on the ANC NEC, Khasu was nominated to stand for re-election; he was the fourth-most popular candidate among party branches in the North West.[12] According to the Mail & Guardian, the North West ANC's provincial general council had raised the matter of the ongoing investigation into his expenditure as MEC but had decided that the allegations should not be held against him unless and until he was convicted. When the ANC's 51st National Conference opened in December 2002, Khasu was included on the "preferred" list of nominees, which emerged from horse-trading among provincial leaders, but he was not ultimately elected.[13]

Later public service

In April 2004, Khasu joined the South African diplomatic corps;[14] he served as Ambassador to Gabon.[15] He later returned to South Africa and served as spokesperson for the Minister of Transport, Dipuo Peters.[16]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Twala, Chitja . The Road to Democracy in South Africa, Vol. 4 (1980–1990), Part 1 . UNISA Press . 2010 . Resistance and repression in the Northern Cape, 1980–1990 . 12 April 2023.
  2. Web site: 1987 . Activists hide as UDF men held . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  3. Web site: 1988-07-07 . Surprise: Top UDF leader walks free . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  4. Web site: 2014-06-26 . Contractor under R60m housing cloud gets top state job . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  5. Web site: 24 May 1994 . Minutes of proceedings of the Constitutional Assembly . 2 April 2023 . Department of Justice and Constitutional Development.
  6. Web site: 2002-10-10 . Left seeks soul of ANC . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  7. Web site: 27 October 1998 . ANC Provincial Office Bearers . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/19990221102306/http://www.anc.org.za/lists/ancprovhead.html . 21 February 1999 . 2022-11-29 . African National Congress.
  8. 11 June 1999 . General Notice: Notice 1319 of 1999 – Electoral Commission: Representatives Elected to the Various Legislatures . . Pretoria, South Africa . . 408 . 20203 . 26 March 2021.
  9. Web site: du Preez . Lieze . 29 October 2000 . Angry farmers go cold on state . 2023-04-12 . News24 . en-US.
  10. Web site: 17 March 2001 . 'Vryburg Mafia' threat to premier . 2023-04-12 . News24 . en-US.
  11. Web site: 31 January 2001 . Popo reshuffles NW MECs . 2023-04-12 . News24 . en-US.
  12. Web site: 2002-11-28 . Tainted leader gets North West ANC nod . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  13. Web site: 20 December 2002 . Phosa, the comeback kid . 2023-04-12 . News24 . en-US.
  14. News: 24 August 2004 . Govt Sends Off New Ambassadors . Bua News . 12 April 2023 . allAfrica.
  15. Web site: 2008-02-05 . South Africans evacuated from volatile Chad . 2023-04-12 . The Mail & Guardian . en-ZA.
  16. Web site: 13 February 2014 . Minister distances herself from Facebook page . 2023-04-12 . News24 . en-US.