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SA’s Malema faces political crisis after jail sentence in firearm case

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Malema, 45, was arraigned for firing ⁠a gun into the air during his party’s fifth birthday in 2018.
Julius Malema, a polarizing figure in South African (SA) politics, ​faces an uncertain political future after being sentenced to five years prison on Thursday following his conviction for firing an assault rifle ‌in public during a 2018 rally.
Malema, founder and leader of the far-left Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party, built his platform around advocating for the rights of South Africans who feel left out of the country’s post-apartheid prosperity.
He has rattled investors with calls to nationalise mines and retake land by force, but his cry for economic justice in one ​of the world’s most unequal nations attracts millions of Black youths, many of them educated but facing a bleak future in a country ​where one in three people are jobless.
Malema, 45, was arraigned for firing ⁠a gun into the air during his party’s fifth birthday in 2018 in Eastern Cape province, in violation of the Firearms Control Act.
He had ​pleaded not guilty, arguing the gun was a toy, and his lawyers appealed the sentence on Thursday.
His party calls the case a “witch hunt.”
If upheld, the sentence would ​disqualify Malema from serving as a member of parliament  casting doubt on his ability to retain his enduring influence on South Africa’s political landscape. His EFF is the fourth-biggest party, with roughly 10% of seats in the lower house of parliament.
“For him now, it might just be the end of the road,” independent Political Analyst Ralph Mathekga said. “The ​party had no plan regarding succession … (It is) difficult to imagine the EFF without Malema.”
Nicknamed “Juju” by his supporters, Malema was youth leader of the ruling ​African National Congress.
Malema’s refusal to stop singing “Kill the Boer (farmer)” – an apartheid-era resistance song – has been interpreted in far-right chat rooms and by United States President Donald Trump as a call ‌to murder ⁠white farmers, who own most of the land due to a history of seizures by colonial then white minority rulers.
Critics have accused Malema , a self-declared Marxist of hypocrisy, saying his opulent lifestyle, including luxury cars and homes, clashes with his anti-elite messaging.
Malema’s frequent response is that he does not need to be poor to champion the poor’s cause. In January, in ⁠an address to ​his party faithful, he said: “Being a revolutionary is about the content of your mind ​and not what clothes you wear or what cars you drive.”
Malema has also faced allegations of corruption, which he denies. In 2015, a court threw out money laundering charges against him ​relating to government contracts.
–Reuters–
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