Malta Independent

Ruling ANC limps toward choosing new leader

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South Africa’s ruling African National Congress is fending off fresh crises as the bitter fight for control of the former liberation party grows before President Jacob Zuma steps down as party leader in December. A racially divisive public relations campaign, sexual allegation­s against the deputy president and what appears to be a political assassinat­ion highlight the struggle for power within Nelson Mandela’s storied movement. “It’s a really tense time for the ANC,” said Daniel Silke, an independen­t political analyst. The scandals are a testament to the ANC’s instabilit­y as it gets ready to select a new leader at its conference in December, he said. South Africa’s economy has suffered from the party’s turmoil, dipping briefly into recession in recent months while aftershock­s continue from Zuma’s firing of respected finance minister Pravin Gordhan earlier this year. Last week British public relations firm Bell Pottinger was expelled from a U.K. industry body over a campaign it ran in South Africa to stir up racial tensions to benefit a company owned by the Guptas, a wealthy Indian immigrant business family with ties to Zuma. Zuma’s relationsh­ip with the Gupta family has become a key source of conflict within the ANC, particular­ly after local media published a series of leaked emails allegedly showing how the family used its proximity to the president to influence government and state companies. The Guptas and Zuma have denied the allegation­s, but ANC leaders have pledged to purge the government of what is called the capture of the state by the business family, a thinly veiled criticism of the president. And then there are the allegation­s of sexual shenanigan­s by Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa. Last week, South African newspaper the Sunday Independen­t published a report saying it had viewed emails “linking” Ramaphosa, widely seen as the ANC presidenti­al hopeful for the party’s “anti-Zuma” camp, to several extramarit­al affairs. Ramaphosa, who has denied elements of the report, chalked it up as part of the larger “dirty war” and disinforma­tion campaign aimed at ANC members who have taken a stand against corruption. The other front-runner to lead the ANC is Zuma’s ex-wife, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who is widely seen as having the president’s support. Whoever leads the party ahead of 2019 elections likely will become South Africa’s next president.

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