Cape Argus

ANC delays naming Mahumapelo’s successor

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THE three-day ANC national executive committee (NEC) meeting was unable to select a successor to former North West premier Supra Mahumapelo, opting to consult further before naming anyone to take over in the troubled province.

ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule said three days was not enough to sort out organisati­onal matters and that the governing party’s top brass opted for a special NEC to attend to problemati­c provinces, such as the North West and KwaZuluNat­al.

“A (planned) special NEC will give us more time to deal with all matters and organisati­onal reports from our NEC deployees in provinces, especially in the North West. We want to ensure that when we engage, we come up with solutions and resolve matters once and for all. We felt that we needed more time to further engage … you do not rush to come up with solutions,” he told reporters in Johannesbu­rg.

The three suggested candidates forwarded by the North West provincial executive committee were not adequately discussed due to a lack of time, he added.

Media reports suggested the three candidates were former education member of the executive council (MEC) OJ Tselapedi, agricultur­e MEC Manketsi Tlhape and acting ANC provincial secretary-general Susan Dantjie.

However, the NEC rejected the three, who are allies of the former premier. The appointmen­t of any one of them would be seen as an installati­on of a Mahumapelo proxy.

Embattled Mahumapelo finally stepped down last week, citing a decision to take “early retirement”.

Mahumapelo was under pressure to resign after residents in Mahikeng went on the rampage in April calling for him to resign over allegation­s of corruption.

The widespread protests shut down the province’s capital Mahikeng, where shops were looted and properties damaged.

A ministeria­l task team led by Minister in the Presidency Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma investigat­ed governance issues in the North West, resulting in President Cyril Ramaphosa placing the province under the control of the national government in terms of section 100 of the constituti­on.

Before he threw in the towel, Mahumapelo rescinded his resignatio­n and then chaired a provincial executive meeting to decide his fate.

He then put himself on special leave and appointed corruption-accused finance MEC Wendy Nelson as acting premier.

Mahumapelo, the man also known as “Black Jesus” among his supporters, remains the ANC provincial chairperso­n. He was appointed premier in 2014 by former president Jacob Zuma. – African News Agency (ANA)

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