McKenzie

MMC for Transport Kenny Kunene stops CIT van without a licence disk. Photo: Gayton McKenzie/ Facebook

McKenzie: Last time Kenny stopped a CIT van was to break the law

Gayton McKenzie has poked fun at Kenny Kunene who stopped a CIT van for enforcing the law and not breaking it.

McKenzie

MMC for Transport Kenny Kunene stops CIT van without a licence disk. Photo: Gayton McKenzie/ Facebook

Patriotic Alliance President Gayton McKenzie has poked fun at his friend and business partner Kenny Kunene who now lives by example.

KENNY STOPS A CASH-IN-TRANSIT (CIT) OVER A GOOD DEED

McKenzie shared a photo of Kenny, who now holds the MMC for Transport portfolio in the City of Johannesburg, standing next to a cash-in-transit (CIT) van in what appears to be a roadblock.

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McKenzie seemed to be impressed by Kenny enforcing the law, especially in close proximity to a CIT van, a vehicle he once targeted once upon a time in his criminal past.

“The last time Kenny stopped a cash-in-transit van was to break the law. Today he stopped it to enforce the law. Things change.”

McKenzie

ALSO READ: Gayton McKenzie: From blowing up cash trucks to owning mines

KUNENE, A TEACHER AND CRIMINAL PAST

Kenny, a formidable businessman and politician, had a promising career as a high teacher but allowed criminal activities to get the better of him.

He engaged in criminal activities including robberies and fraud, however, it was fraud that got him arrested for running a Ponzi scheme which saw him serve six years in prison.

MCKENZIE PARTNERS WITH OLD TIME FRIEND IN BUSINESS AND POLITICS

After Kenny’s release, he became a motivational speaker and active in local politics. He moved on to own a club in partnership with his ex-convict friend Gayton McKenzie who both formed Patriotic Alliance after a number of business ventures together.

The duo has used their political influence to change the lives of people, especially in the ‘forsaken’ communities.

The growth of their political party has earned them prominent positions in local government structures across the country, with McKenzie as Mayor of the Central Karoo District in the Western Cape, while Kenny serves as the MMC for Transport and bears a huge task of fixing potholes across the city.

More than anything the duo serves as an epitome that ‘one’s ill behaviour can be rehabilitated from South African Correctional Services facilities’.