Cape Argus

‘ANC split over Gordhan’s fate’

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THE ANC is reportedly split at the top over whether Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan should be sacked, sources said. President Jacob Zuma wants to replace Gordhan and has the support of chairperso­n Baleka Mbete and deputy secretary-general Jessie Duarte, the sources said.

But Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, secretary-general Gwede Mantashe and treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize want Gordhan to remain and have expressed their opinion to Zuma.

The rift at the top comes amid party divisions over the finance minister’s plans to rein in spending as the economy stagnates, analysts say.

While Zuma does not need the backing of the top six ANC members to fire ministers, open criticism might undermine his own position within the party.

“The three have told Zuma he’s making a mistake,” a senior party source said. As Gordhan’s future hangs in the balance, more volatile trading in the rand underlined his reputation as an emblem of South Africa’s stability among investors.

Local assets have been under pressure since Monday when Zuma ordered Gordhan to abandon an investor roadshow in Britain and fly home.

Zuma has not given a reason for the recall.

The rand extended losses early yesterday as speculatio­n grew Zuma would sack Gordhan after the funeral of anti-apartheid hero Ahmed Kathrada and a cabinet meeting due in the afternoon.

It later strengthen­ed against the dollar in response to the first media reports that the party’s leadership was split over his fate. The currency then weakened as much as 0.5%.

After attending Kathrada’s funeral, Gordhan said that he will “open a new chapter” of his life if speculatio­n that Zuma is set to sack him proves correct.

“You deal with it in a profession­al way… and if one is told one’s services are not required any longer that’s the end of one chapter and we open a new chapter.”

Zuma did not attend the funeral in line with the wishes of Kathrada’s family.

Affectiona­tely known as Uncle Kathy the Struggle stalwart, who spent 26 years in prison under the apartheid government, was a critic of Zuma.

Zuma, 74, has shown no sign of stepping down before his second and final term ends in 2019.

Backed by the top echelons of the ANC, he has survived several scandals since taking office in 2009.

Njabulo Nzuza, secretary-general of the ANC Youth League, supported cabinet changes, saying a reshuffle was “normal”.

A cabinet source said about yesterday’s meeting: “Cabinet appointmen­ts are solely the president’s prerogativ­e, therefore it won’t be something he’ll discuss there.” – Reuters

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