Fight to replace S. Africa’s Zuma begins
JOHANNESBURG: The fight to replace South Africa’s scandal-prone President Jacob Zuma began as thousands of delegates of the ruling African National Congress gathered to elect a new leader, with Zuma acknowledging “failures” that have threatened the party’s future.
The reputation of Nelson Mandela’s liberation movement has been battered during the tenure of Zuma, whose second term as party president is up. The new ANC leader is likely to become South Africa’s next president in 2019 elections.
The two clear front-runners are Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, former chair of the African Union Commission and Zuma’s ex-wife.
Voters are frustrated with the ANC as Zuma’s administration has been mired in scandal and corruption allegations.
Observers say the party needs to restore its reputation or it could be forced into a governing coalition for the first time.
Party divisions run so deep that analysts say either outcome, Ramaphosa or Dlamini-Zuma, could mean the end of the ANC’s dominance as members of the losing faction could form a new party.
“We must attend to enormous challenges facing our movement,” Zuma told the gathering.
He pushed back against allegations of graft, asserting that “theft and corruption” in the private sector is just as bad as in government and that “being black and successful is being made synonymous to being corrupt”. But Zuma said “greed is posing a serious threat” to the party and pointed out warnings that the ANC could implode.
He rejected the party’s “petty squabbles” that have distracted its work and said challenges to inclusion are “killing our movement”.
He also lashed out at the media, the judiciary and civil society, accusing them of fighting the ANC or interfering in party matters.
“A heavy responsibility lies upon the shoulders of delegates here ... to renew our movement and to restore its timeless values,” he said.
“We must give people reason to have faith.”
Zuma didn’t endorse a successor, saying any of the seven candidates would make a “first-class president”.