Annelizé van Wyk

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Annelizé van Wyk
Member of the National Assembly
In office
5 August 2009 – 6 May 2014
In office
June 1999 – May 2009
Member of the Gauteng Provincial Legislature
In office
1994–1997
Personal details
Born (1964-08-24) 24 August 1964 (age 59)
Pretoria, Transvaal
South Africa
Political partyAfrican National Congress (since April 2003)
Other political
affiliations
Alma materUniversity of Potchefstroom

Annelizé van Wyk (born 24 August 1964) is a South African politician who served in the National Assembly from 1999 to 2014, excepting a brief hiatus in 2009. She represented the United Democratic Movement (UDM) until April 2003, when she crossed the floor to the African National Congress (ANC). She chaired the Portfolio Committee on Police from 2012 to 2014.

During apartheid, van Wyk was a military intelligence officer in the South African Defence Force and a supporter of the governing National Party (NP). She represented the NP in the post-apartheid Gauteng Provincial Legislature from 1994 until 1997, when she left to become a founding member of the UDM.

Early life and career

Van Wyk was born on 24 August 1964[1] in Pretoria in the former Transvaal.[2] She is Afrikaans.[3] Her father was a correctional services officer – he personally drove Nelson Mandela from Pretoria to Cape Town for incarceration on Robben Island – and later became a general in the apartheid-era South African Defence Force (SADF).[3]

After completing her undergraduate degree at the University of Potchefstroom, she enlisted in SADF and worked as an officer in the military intelligence division,[2] which at the time was involved in, among other things, enforcing the repression of the anti-apartheid movement. She joined the governing National Party (NP) in 1987[2] and became a party activist.[4] After leaving SADF, she worked at the Human Sciences Research Council.[2]

Reflecting on her activities during apartheid, van Wyk later said:

For me, the end of apartheid wasn't only about freedom and democracy for the majority of South Africans but it was a personal freedom as well. If you live with the feeling of things not being right and that some people are being treated less like human beings than others, it puts a personal burden on yourself.[4]

Political career

Gauteng Legislature: 1994–1997

After South Africa's first post-apartheid elections in 1994, van Wyk represented the NP in the Gauteng Provincial Legislature from 1994 to 1997.[2] She resigned from her seat and from the NP in 1997 in order to become a founding member of the United Democratic Movement (UDM).[2]

National Assembly: 1999–2014

Floor-crossing

In the next general election in 1999, van Wyk was elected to represent the UDM in the National Assembly, the lower house of the national Parliament.[1] On 1 April 2003, during that year's floor-crossing window, she and five other UDM MPs, among them Salam Abram and Cedric Frolick, announced that they would resign from the party and join the governing African National Congress (ANC). Until then it had been rumoured that van Wyk was planning to join the Democratic Alliance (DA), another opposition party;[5] she confirmed that the DA had approached her and the others, but said that they believed the UDM had always been closer to the ANC than to the DA.[6]

Van Wyk's constituency office in Sea Point, Cape Town

The following year, during a parliamentary debate about the 2004 State of the Nation address, President Thabo Mbeki singled van Wryk out as an exemplar of a former NP supporter who had the "courage, honesty and personal integrity" to "allow us to speak openly about her past and for herself to wrestle with the demons of her past".[3] She was re-elected to her seat in the general election held weeks later, standing under the ANC's banner,[7] but was not initially re-elected to a third term in 2009 general election. Instead, she was sworn in three months after the election, on 5 August 2009, to fill the casual vacancy that arose after Lindiwe Hendricks resigned.[8]

Committee memberships

During her third term in Parliament, van Wyk sat on the ad hoc committee that processed the highly controversial Secrecy Bill; according to Richard Calland, she was "enthusiastically vigorous" in her defence of the bill.[5] She also sat on the Portfolio Committee on Police, and in 2010 she, with committee chairperson Sindi Chikunga, co-led a parliamentary task team that investigated possible financial mismanagement in state contracts to build police stations.[9] When Chikunga left the committee in mid-2012 to become Deputy Minister of Transport, the ANC appointed van Wyk to serve as acting chairperson.[10] She was formally nominated for election as chairperson in June 2013.[11]

In the 2014 general election, van Wyk was ranked 200th on the ANC's national party list and was not re-elected.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b "General Notice: Notice 1319 of 1999 – Electoral Commission: Representatives Elected to the Various Legislatures" (PDF). Government Gazette of South Africa. Vol. 408, no. 20203. Pretoria, South Africa: Government of South Africa. 11 June 1999. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Annelizé van Wyk". People's Assembly. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  3. ^ a b c "Mbeki lauds MP for 'dealing with her past'". IOL. 13 February 2004. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Mandela dies with dream in progress". IOL. 6 December 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Civil society our last hope of intelligent life". The Mail & Guardian. 27 August 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  6. ^ "Six more UDM MPs defect". News24. 1 April 2003. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  7. ^ "General Notice: Notice 717 of 2004 - Electoral Commission – List of Names of Representatives in the National Assembly and the Nine Provincial Legislatures in Respect of the Elections Held on 14 April 2004" (PDF). Government Gazette of South Africa. Vol. 466, no. 2677. Pretoria, South Africa: Government of South Africa. 20 April 2004. pp. 4–95. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  8. ^ "Members of the National Assembly". Parliamentary Monitoring Group. Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  9. ^ "Rot runs deep in police stations". The Mail & Guardian. 10 September 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  10. ^ "Promotion of MP leaves police committee 'rudderless'". The Mail & Guardian. 14 June 2012. Retrieved 26 April 2023.
  11. ^ "Sizani replaces Motshekga as ANC Chief Whip". Sowetan. 20 June 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2023.

External links