Senzo Mfayela

Senzo Brian Mfayela (born 23 November 1961) is a South African businessman and former politician who represented the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) in the National Assembly from 1994 to 1999. He is the chief executive officer of Mangosuthu Buthelezi's Buthelezi Foundation.

Early life and career
Born on 23 November 1961, Mfayela attended Fort Hare University until he was expelled for participating in student-organised boycotts. His father represented the IFP (then called Inkatha) in the KwaZulu Legislative Assembly, and he joined the party's Central Committee before the end of apartheid. During the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, it was wrongly reported that testimony had implicated Mfayela in political assassinations in Natal during apartheid; the testimony in fact implicated another person of the same surname.

Post-apartheid career
Mfayela was elected to the National Assembly in South Africa's first post-apartheid elections in 1994. While serving in his seat, he was also the IFP's national organiser. He served a single term in his seat: although he was nominated to stand for re-election in 1999, he narrowly failed to gain re-election, and weeks after the vote, he announced that he was leaving frontline politics to pursue a business career.

After resigning from politics, he was appointed as an executive director at Masithembe Investments, a KwaZulu-Natal-based black economic empowerment consortium led by Ziba Jiyane. In later years, he held several business interests, including shares and directorships in IFP-linked companies and in Dezzo Holdings, a politically connected company that was controversially awarded a R2.1-billion housing contract with the government in 2011. He is currently the chief executive officer of the Buthelezi Foundation, a charitable foundation that aims to "preserve the legacy" of its patron, IFP founder Mangosuthu Buthelezi.