Mail & Guardian

Zuma now firmly in the firing line

The ANC’s new national executive and integrity committee will be able to call him to account

- Mail & Guardian Politics Team

President Jacob Zuma’s future hangs in the balance in the wake of the ANC national conference, with party president Cyril Ramaphosa’s more militant backers pushing for the head of state to be recalled early next year at the latest.

With the conference endorsing greater powers for the ANC’s integrity committee and the immediate appointmen­t of a commission of inquiry into state capture, a recall of all those implicated — Zuma foremost — is likely.

The conference also resolved that the new national executive committee (NEC) look into the issue of two centres of power and act accordingl­y — another serious threat to Zuma’s bid to see out the rest of his term.

The compositio­n of the new NEC, an estimated 70% of which is made up of Ramaphosa supporters, along with his anti-corruption campaign ticket, are likely to give Ramaphosa the confidence to act against Zuma.

Ramaphosa had focused his campaign on a promise to deal with corruption and the new NEC, cognisant of how badly Zuma cost the party in the 2014 national and 2016 local elections, will give the new ANC president the muscle to act against Zuma and Cabinet members implicated in the #Guptaleaks and other scandals. Among those implicated in taking instructio­n from the controvers­ial family are the co-operative governance minister, Des van Rooyen, the mines minister, Mosebenzi Zwane, and the public enterprise­s minister, Lynne Brown.

Although Zuma ignored previous ANC decisions on the appointmen­t of the state capture commission, the new NEC will be able to call him to account using its own powers and those of the party’s integrity committee. It will also be emboldened by the fact that Zuma is no longer party president.

Zuma escaped two motions by the NEC for him to step down as the country’s president because of the ANC 2007 Polokwane resolution that the president of the ANC must become the country’s president, to avoid two centres of power.

Zuma has ignored earlier calls from the integrity committee that he step down after the Constituti­onal Court ruled that he violated his oath of office when he failed to implement the public protector’s report. At the time of writing it was not clear whether the ANC had agreed to give the integrity commission binding powers or leave it to make recommenda­tions, as is the current situation.

Although Zuma was able to ignore it before, the new NEC will enforce its recommenda­tions. Though some of Ramaphosa’s supporters want the new leadership to recall Zuma immediatel­y, others say he should be given an ultimatum to take firm decisions against corruption, including state capture.

“The NEC is likely to give the old man an ultimatum in the form of a list of those who need to be reshuffled and list of tasks they want implemente­d,” said an ANC source who cannot be named because he is not authorised to talk to the media. “They will try and avoid having to do what they did with former president, Thabo Mbeki, and show him the writing on the wall and let him go by himself.

“They are going to use the integrity committee to remove those who are implicated in state capture. They are going to push that [Chief Justice] Mogoeng Mogoeng move immediatel­y to appoint a judge to head the state capture inquiry,” he said.

The source said Zuma also faced a dire legal threat once the national director of public prosecutio­ns Shaun Abrahams is replaced. The North Gauteng high court ruled earlier this month that Ramaphosa, and not Zuma, must appoint a new prosecutio­ns boss.

“They are also going to have Cyril appoint a new national director of public prosecutio­ns to replace Shaun [Abrahams] straight away,” the source added.

Zuma also faces a threat in terms of the contradict­ion between state and party.

“The NEC is going to deal with the issue of two centres of power very quickly and take a decision on it,” the source said. “Some of Cyril’s supporters want the old man gone now, before the end of the month or the January 8 statement. Some even wanted to go for a motion to recall him here at the plenary on [the] closing day of conference, to get rid of him straight away before he starts using organs of the state to fight back.”

Another NEC source told the Mail & Guardian Zuma was livid about ANC deputy president David Mabuza’s “betrayal” of him by secretly working with Ramaphosa.

“The old man is very angry with DD [Mabuza]. He feels he sold him out to Cyril,” the source said.

The M&G reported earlier this year that Zuma supporters had given Mabuza an ultimatum — either endorse Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma or face arrest.

By Wednesday ANC sources were expressing concerns that Zuma would instruct the Hawks to act against Mabuza over old criminal cases in Mpumalanga, which had been placed on hold.

Addressing a briefing at the Nasrec expo centre yesterday on the issue of two centres of power, Fikile Mbalula, the chairperso­n of the organisati­onal renewal commission, said it was a non-negotiable that the ANC was the centre of power.

“If the decision to recall the president arises in the context of the new NEC, that will be a decision of the ANC. It will be a decision in the context of the NEC being the centre of power, which is basically non-negotiable,” Mbalula said.

“The NEC has got that right to take that decision. And they take the decision in the best interest of the ANC, if it arises,” Mbalula said.

Affirming that the previous NEC was hamstrung by the two centres of power resolution, one previous NEC member urged the top six to sit down with Zuma and instruct him to resign immediatel­y.

In an address to the 68 delegates whose votes for the election of secretary general were excluded by the conference steering committee, Ramaphosa appealed to them to accept the result, which was won by ANC Free State chairperso­n Ace Magashule. The excluded delegates served the ANC with a letter of demand on Wednesday over the exclusion of their votes, whereas others wanted to raise the matter of whether or not to add them to the branches.

“We met briefly as the four officials and felt that what we must protect is the integrity of this conference,” Ramaphosa said. “We mustn’t allow it to degenerate into controvers­y. Even if we are not happy with the whole result, what this does is that it gives us a beachhead to be able to start the process of reinstilli­ng the values of the ANC.”

 ??  ?? Pointers to the future: ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa, deputy president David Mabuza and treasurer general Paul Mashatile in discussion at the ANC’s 54th conference. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy
Pointers to the future: ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa, deputy president David Mabuza and treasurer general Paul Mashatile in discussion at the ANC’s 54th conference. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy

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