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Populist politician Julius Malema launched South Africa's newest party Saturday to take on the ruling African National Congress, whose youth wing he once headed, in polls next year. Malema's leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) held its first general assembly in Soweto, the Johannesburg township which was a hotbed of resistance against white minority rule.
"We are in the opposition" Malema told journalists. The party will push for land to be expropriated without compensation and nationalisation of mines, a cornerstone of Africa's largest economy, he said. Earlier, a few hundred supporters sporting the EFF's trademark red berets filled a community hall, singing liberation songs and waving flags before they discussed the party's manifesto in a closed session.
Some voiced frustration at the ANC, which they accuse of doing too little to reduce poverty and create jobs since it came to power in 1994. "Twenty years of freedom is too much. Now we are free but we don't enjoy the freedom because we are not working," said Tsepo Morupane. Another party member denounced corruption in the ANC government.
"In the ANC... we are not going anywhere. That's why today we are gathered here - so that we can go forward," said Andries Leduwaby. In his opening address to the assembly on Friday night, Malema said land owners must be forced to sell and "if the seller is not willing to sell we will take". "People are saying we are chasing away investors... tell them that is the whole intention because we want to produce local investors," he added. The 32-year-old firebrand leader pushed for the ANC to take a harder line when he was still its youth leader.
The ruling party expelled him for ill-discipline early last year and decided against expropriation and nationalisation at its December conference. Malema started the EFF movement earlier in July, when he said the group "should be a radical left, anti-capitalist and anti-imperialist movement".

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2013

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