On 10 April 2008, Bullard was fired as a
Sunday Times columnist after the publication, the previous Sunday, of a column entitled "Uncolonised Africa wouldn't know what it was missing", that the newspaper subsequently described as racist and insulting to black people. On 13 April,
Sunday Times editor
Mondli Makhanya apologised for publishing the column, saying that "by publishing him (Bullard) we were complicit in disseminating his Stone Age philosophies". The same issue of the paper carried an entire page dedicated to letters regarding the column and firing, roughly equally divided between support for the paper and support for Bullard. Bullard linked his firing with a column ("Run out of gas") published in
Empire magazine in February 2008, in which he was highly critical of the
Sunday Times and its editorial management. Makhanya denied any connection. After a week of sustained media interest, Bullard apologised for the offending column, but said the next day he would sue for unfair dismissal. At least three complaints were laid against him with the
South African Human Rights Commission. Asked about Bullard in a press conference subsequently, arts and culture minister
Pallo Jordan said his writing amounted to defecating on Africans and that "Bullard is the sort of person South Africa does not need within its borders." In 2014, Bullard's case for unfair dismissal against Avusa entered its sixth year. In April 2019, Bullard wrote an article for
The Daily Friend, in which he mentioned the fact that his litigation with the
Sunday Times had entered its twelfth year. ==References==