Mail & Guardian editor-in-chief Verashni Pillay has said the
paper stands by a story it ran claiming DA leader Mmusi Maimane has been
taking "leadership classes" from former president FW de Klerk.
The report alleged that Maimane had visited De Klerk on various occasions to seek leadership advice. This was confirmed by four separate senior party insiders at the Democratic Alliance (DA), the paper claimed.
The story has since been fuelled by online reaction that the DA "harbours apartheid sentiment”.
Top DA officials though have bitten back.
DA
leader Mmusi Maimane told News24 on Friday that the story is an
“outrageous lie”, and he had only ever met De Klerk once, in 2014.
- Read more: 'Outrageous lie' - Maimane on De Klerk leadership lessons report
Former DA leader Helen Zille took to Twitter to express her opinions on the report too, labelling the story "malicious".
De Klerk said in a statement there was no truth to the rumours
that he was tutoring Maimane. "He has never been to my home and never
sought my advice 'on speeches and leadership and acting presidential',"
adding that he only met Maimane once at his office in March 2015, "when
he paid me a courtesy visit".
News24 spoke to Pillay about the DA’s response, with Pillay standing firm on her paper’s Friday lead.
'Not a lie'
“The story is not a lie and the M&G stands by everything we’ve written,” Pillay said on Friday.
“Mr
Maimane was given ample opportunity to respond to the allegations ahead
of publication. He eventually sent a statement through the DA
spokesperson saying he was not going to comment.
“If his version
of events is that he only met De Klerk once, he could have simply said
so. Our senior sources said it goes beyond one meeting and that Maimane
takes leadership lessons from De Klerk.”
None of the Mail &
Guardian’s sources, she claimed, could go on the record because of a
climate of “fear and silence within the party”.
The sources
include one staff member from national head office, two members of a
provincial legislature and a member of the federal executive, she said.
‘Malicious, manufactured’, says Zille
Zille
took exception on social media not only to the report, but also its
co-reporter, Nelly Shamase, who used to be a member of the party.
The Western Cape premier called into account the objectivity of the Mail & Guardian reporter when she co-wrote the story.
“This
kind of maliciously manufactured story shows why the M&G is going
out of business. No credibility left,” Zille tweeted.
“It is so
unprofessional that ex-DA employees with an axe to grind are allowed to
masquerade as independent journalists by various titles.”
No comments:
Post a Comment