Thandi Modise

Thandi Modise
Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces
Assumed office
21 May 2014
Preceded by M. J. Mahlangu
4th Premier of North West
In office
19 November 2010  20 May 2014
Preceded by Maureen Modiselle
Succeeded by Supra Mahumapelo
Deputy Secretary-General of the African National Congress
In office
16 December 2007  December 2012
Preceded by Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele
Succeeded by Jessie Duarte
Personal details
Born (1959-12-25) 25 December 1959
Vryburg, North West Province
Political party African National Congress

Thandi Modise (born 25 December 1959, Vryburg)[1] is a South African politician, currently serving as chairperson of the National Council of Provinces.[2]

She left South Africa in 1976 to join the African National Congress and received training in Angola. She returned to South Africa in 1978 as an Umkhonto weSizwe operative.[1] She was arrested and imprisoned in 1979, becoming the first woman in South Africa to be jailed for MK activities.[1]

She served as the Premier of North West from 19 November 2010 to 21 May 2014, when she was replaced by Supra Mahumapelo, also from the ANC, after the 2014 general election. 1 Thandi Modise

Synopsis: Deputy President of ANC Women's League, Member of the NEC of the ANC, Council Member of the Robben Island Museum, Premier of North West Province. First name: ThandiLast name: ModiseDate of birth: 25 December 1959Location of birth: Huhudi township,Vryburg, North West Province

Thandi Modise, the youngest of six children, was born on 25 December 1959 in Huhudi township near Vryburg in the North West. Her father, Frans Modise, a railworker, was an African National Congress (ANC) activist.

The students uprising in 1976 in her area coincided with the threat that the Vryburg area in the North West would be incorporated into Bophuthatswana. There was a great deal of resistance from the people of Huhudi, and a violent and aggressive reaction from police. When Modise was shot at by police one day as she was walking down the road, she became convinced that joining the struggle was paramount. She decided to leave the country and join Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK) in exile.

In 1976 she slipped over the border into Botswana to join the ANC and was later transferred to Angola where she received military training at Nova-Katenga and Funda camps. At times there were only 30 women out of a total of 500 trainees. On some occasions she was the only woman in the camp.

After training she worked in the camps as a political commissar. Modise also received political education, sitting in open classrooms, under trees, in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. In a camp of four companies, only Modise and one other woman had a senior rank, the rest of the women were rank and file soldiers. When they started training she was made a section commissar. Later, Modise became a commander. According to Modise, it was tough because some of the men did not really want to be commanded by young women.

In 1978 she returned to South Africa to work underground as an MK operative. She was arrested in 1979, while she was four months' pregnant. Modise received an eight-year jail sentence which she served at Kroonstad Prison and was the first woman in South Africa to be jailed for MK activities. While she was in prison, Modise enrolled for studies and completed her matriculation and a BComm degree in Industrial Psychology and Economics. She was released in 1988.

A lover of jazz, Modise sang soprano in the choirs in the MK training camps. Modise recalls the late Oliver Tambo, President of the ANC, singing with the choir on a visit to one of the camps. Modise also enjoys watching soccer. "That's a pastime I developed in the camps. My favourite team was called the 'People's Club'," says Modise.

Modise has remained committed to the Huhudi community. She started the African National Congress Women League (ANCWL) branch in Huhudi, and is a founder member of the Lesedi Community Clinic. Modise served on the ANCWL National Executive from 1991 to 1993, when she was elected deputy president a position she held until 2004. Between 1998 and 2004 she also served as chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Defence and the Joint Standing Committee on Defence, and as a Member of Parliament. In addition, Modise serves as the Deputy Secretary General of the ANC and also a member of its National Executive Committee. On 19 November 2010 Modise was appointed Premier of North West province. In addition, she serves as the Chairperson of Council of the Robben Island Museum.

Thandi Modise has four children and lives in Johannesburg.


References: • Anon, (1994), Thandi Modise 24 January, [online] Available at http://www.etools.co.za/newsbrief/1994/news0124 [Accessed on 4 April 2004] • Anon, Thandi Modise, Ms, [online], from the South African Government Online, [online], Available at www.gov.za [Accessed 4 April 2011] • Modise, T and Curnow, R, Thandi Modise, a Woman in War in Agenda, No. 43, Women and the Aftermath, (2000), pp. 36-40. Further Reading: Thandi Modise - A woman in war The life and times of Thandi Modise: North West premier’s official CV just doesn’t check out

Last updated : 07-Jan-2015

This article was produced for South African History Online on 17-Feb-2011

- See more at: http://www.sahistory.org.za/people/thandi-modise#sthash.8XtZcUuV.dpuf

Controversy

In July 2014, the NSPCA discovered a number of dead animals, including chickens, pigs, goats and geese, on a farm owned by Modise in Modderfontein, outside Potchefstroom in the North West Province. It was apparent that the animals had gone without food and water for more than a week, and 85 remaining pigs on the farm had resorted to cannibalising 58 dead pigs.[3] No workers were present on the property. North West Police confirmed on 7 July that she will face charges of animal cruelty in violation of the Animal Protection Act. She responded to the claims by stating that she was "learning"[4] how to farm, and that she had appointed a farm manager, but he had abandoned his duties to attend to a family matter.[5] Approximately four months later, it was reported that conditions on the farm had improved, that Modise's cattle had been receiving sufficient food and were in an "acceptable condition".[6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Thandi Modise". SA History Online. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  2. "Thandi Modise elected National Council of Provinces chair". TimesLive. May 22, 2014. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  3. "Thandi Modise could face criminal charges over farm horror". eNCA. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  4. "Today's top stories". Destinyconnect.com. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  5. "Modise to cooperate with SPCA". iafrica.com. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  6. "Better conditions at Thandi Modise's farm". The Citizen. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
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