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Malema slams UK over visa refusal

JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - NOVEMBER 25: CIC Julius Malema addresses the media at Winnie Madikizela Mandela House on November 25, 2021in Johannesburg, South Africa. This follows the Inaugural Council Meetings held across the country. (Photo by Gallo Images/Sharon Seretlo) JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - NOVEMBER 25: CIC Julius Malema addresses the media at Winnie Madikizela Mandela House on November 25, 2021in Johannesburg, South Africa. This follows the Inaugural Council Meetings held across the country. (Photo by Gallo Images/Sharon Seretlo)
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - NOVEMBER 25: CIC Julius Malema addresses the media at Winnie Madikizela Mandela House on November 25, 2021in Johannesburg, South Africa. This follows the Inaugural Council Meetings held across the country. (Photo by Gallo Images/Sharon Seretlo)

EFF leader Julius Malema has accused the British High Commission of intentionally blocking his visa application, preventing him from addressing the 11th Annual Cambridge Africa Together Conference at Cambridge University. Malema was scheduled to speak to students on May 10, 2025, at one of the university’s prestigious events.

The party has criticized the delay, calling it an attempt to suppress political dissent and undermine global solidarity against Western imperialism. According to the EFF, this refusal is a direct result of Malema’s outspoken criticism of the UK, particularly its role in colonial atrocities and its support for the ongoing Palestinian genocide.

Malema was invited by the African Society of Cambridge University to discuss the theme “The Making of Africa’s Future Presidents,” which would have brought together policy makers, business leaders, economists, and academics from across the globe. The EFF believes the delay is a strategic move to silence Malema’s critical stance against figures like former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, who led the invasion of Iraq under false pretenses.

The party claims that the UK’s actions are a response to Malema’s condemnation of the British monarchy, which they say continues to be responsible for colonial violence and the oppression of African nations. The refusal, according to the EFF, is also tied to the monarchy’s lingering influence over political processes in the UK.

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