The Free Press Journal

South Africa faces trouble as Zuma refuses to quit

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South Africa has been pitched into political crisis after the ruling ANC party admitted that President Jacob Zuma had defied its orders to resign, and that it had little idea of when the 75-year-old head of state would agree to leave office, as reported by some western newspapers

The decision to tell Zuma, who faces multiple charges of corruption, to stand down was taken at an emergency session of the highest decision-making body of the African National Congress near Pretoria, the administra­tive capital, late on Monday evening and conveyed to the president about midnight.

Ace Magashule, the ANC’s secretary general, confirmed on Tuesday that the party had decided to “recall” Zuma from his “deployment as president” but said that no deadline had been given and there had been no discussion of bringing a motion of no-confidence to oust him. “When we recall our deployee we expect him to do what we tell him to do … We are expecting the president respond… there’s no deadline,” Magashule told a press conference in Johannesbu­rg.

The failure to immediatel­y force Zuma from office will be seen as evidence of deep divisions within the ANC, and underlines the failure of Cyril Ramaphosa, deputy president and the party’s leader, to impose his authority on the organisati­on.

The meeting of the ANC’s national executive committee (NEC) was called after it became clear over the weekend that nearly five days of talks between Zuma, an antiaparth­eid activist who has been South Africa’s president since 2009, and Ramaphosa, who took over the leadership of the ANC in December, had failed.

After nearly 10 hours of heated debate, Ramaphosa and Magashule left the meeting shortly before midnight to drive to the president’s official residence to deliver an ultimatum: stand down or face “recall”, a technical term for the process of forcing an ANC official to leave their post.

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