The Sunday Guardian

Ramaphosa, dlamini-Zuma in tight race to lead s. africa

Ramaphosa has stepped up criticism of Jacob Zuma’s scandal-plagued government, while Dlamini-Zuma’s priority is to improve prospects for the black majority.

- REUTERS

The African National Congress (ANC), South Africa’s only ruler since the end of apartheid, votes this weekend in a race too close to call to replace Jacob Zuma as party leader with the winner also likely to become the next president.

The election is perhaps the most pivotal moment for the ANC in its 23 years of power. Scandal and corruption allegation­s have tainted Zuma’s presidency and the party that launched black majority rule under Nobel Peace Prize laureate Nelson Mandela is now deeply divided, its image tarnished at home and abroad.

The ANC will announce Zuma’s successor on Sunday, concluding a bruising leadership battle that threatens to splinter the 105-yearold liberation movement.

The race has been dominated by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, 65, generally favored by financial markets, and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, 68, an excabinet minister, chairwoman of the African Union Commission and Zuma’s exwife.

Zuma, whose term as head of state expires in 2019, has endorsed Dlamini-Zuma to succeed him.

South Africa’s rand firmed more than 2 percent after courts ruled senior officials in provinces seen as supporting Dlamini-Zuma had been illegally elected and could not attend the conference.

Ramaphosa won a majority of the nomination­s to become leader of the party, but delegates at the Dec. 16-20 conference in Johannesbu­rg are not bound to vote for the candidate their ANC branch nominated, meaning it is unclear if he will actually win.

The ANC’s National Executive Committee, a decision-making group of senior leaders, met before the conference began and decided that barred delegates could not vote at the conference.

“We don’t want to contam- inate the conference... They will not vote on any matter,” ANC Secretary General Gwede Mantashe told reporters.

ANC Youth League leader Collen Maine, who backs Dlamini-Zuma, said 122 delegates would be prevented from voting at the conference following the ruling by the courts. “That is not significan­t,” Maine told Reuters. Asked if barring the delegates gave Ramaphosa a boost, a senior official of Cosatu, South Africa’s largest union federation that is also an ANC ally, said: “Definitely. But we are not banking only on that. We have trust that ANC delegates know what the country needs at the moment.”

Delegates in T-shirts in the gold and green colors of the ANC sang party songs and danced, with many waving party flags while women rent the air with ululations.

Zuma’s conference speech was expected to start much later than the ANC had previously said. The delay was caused by the NEC meeting and slow registrati­on of about 6,000 delegates. To his supporters, Ramaphosa’s business success makes him well-suited to the task of turning around an economy grappling with 28 percent unemployme­nt and credit rating downgrades.

“Early signs of a win for Cyril Ramaphosa, the more investor- friendly option, have provided support for the rand,” John Ashbourne, Africa economist at Capital Economics, said.

“But while Mr. Ramaphosa is popular among party members, the result will be decided by political insiders, who may opt for his leftist opponent, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma.”

Ramaphosa has recently stepped up criticism of Zuma’s scandal- plagued government, while DlaminiZum­a has said her priority is to improve prospects for the black majority.

He is expected to be backed by ANC veterans, labor unions and civil society organizati­ons. In contrast, Dlamini-Zuma is seen as a fierce campaigner against racial inequality whose hostility to big business has rattled investors in South Africa.

“She has not made corruption the only pillar of her campaign, because the most critical issue in South Africa is this huge inequality,” said Carl Niehaus, a key member of Dlamini-Zuma’s campaign.

Growth in Africa’s most industrial­ized economy has been lackluster for the last six years, and the jobless rate is near record levels. Analysts say the ANC leadership battle has made it hard to reform the economy and improve social services.

Colin Coleman, managing director of Goldman Sachs in South Africa, said the positions of the two candidates on the economy were quite divergent and the choice between Ramaphosa and Dlamini-Zuma was binary.

“This is a pivotal moment. It is a choice between refreshing the ANC and putting South Africa on a course of a modern economy, or the party outlook may move deeper down a patronage path which would lead to a low-growth and highunempl­oyment outcome for the people of South Africa.”

 ??  ?? Cyril Ramaphosa
Cyril Ramaphosa
 ??  ?? Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma

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