Sowetan

Deal: Zuma is going

●Meeting with Cyril Ramaphosa ends president’s resistance ● NEC meeting postponed to allow for further talks

- By Moipone Malefane, Ngwako Modjadji and Thabo Mokone

President Jacob Zuma last night agreed to step down following a deal struck with ANC leader Cyril Ramaphosa at a meeting in Cape Town.

Details of the deal are yet to be worked out, but senior ANC sources said Ramaphosa decided to postpone the much-anticipate­d national executive committee (NEC) meeting scheduled for tonight after Zuma agreed to go.

But the deal seems to have taken some of the party’s top leaders by surprise as they were gearing themselves up for tonight’s meeting where the party was to recall Zuma from office.

Two senior ANC leaders who spoke to Sowetan last night complained that Ramaphosa had not consulted with some of his top six officials before making the surprise announceme­nt that the NEC meeting would now be postponed to next weekend.

Party secretary-general Ace Magashule is said to have been with Zuma and Ramaphosa before the start of the meeting at Zuma’s Cape Town residence but that the two held the discussion without him being present in the room.

While the mood within the ANC has been that of taking the fight to Zuma following his refusal on Sunday to step down, Ramaphosa is understood to have always sought an arrangemen­t that would see Zuma stepping down without being officially fired.

In a short statement issued last night, the ANC said the postponeme­nt followed “fruitful and constructi­ve engagement­s, on various issues” between Zuma and Ramaphosa.

Ramaphosa’s supporters within the party said Zuma’s departure from office was now “a done deal” and that the two of them were working out the terms of the exit. It was not clear when Zuma is expected to announce his resignatio­n.

But an NEC member who campaigned for Ramaphosa to be ANC president said Zuma was not likely to still be in office by the weekend.

Zuma’s about-turn puts an end to a conflict that looked destined to result in him being recalled by the party or axed from office through an opposition parties’ sponsored motion of no confidence.

On Sunday, he refused to abdicate office, arguing that Ramaphosa and other officials did not have a mandate from the NEC to ask him to resign. He dared them to take the matter to a full NEC meeting. But, with just a day to go before the NEC meeting, and with parliament taking an extraordin­ary step to postpone his State of the Nation Address, Zuma seems to have finally realised yesterday that his time was up.

Zuma was scheduled to deliver Sona tomorrow evening, but those plans were shelved by National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete and other presiding officers amid uncertaint­y over his future.

Speaking to reporters following her meeting with opposition parties, Mbete said they had approached Zuma on Monday with a view to postpone the event, only to learn that he was thinking the same too. Mbete said they were convinced that there would be no peace in the house if Zuma was allowed to go ahead with the speech as opposition parties had long indicated that they were opposed to the ceremony going ahead.

“We decided to approach the president of the Republic to propose that we postpone the joint sitting in order to create room for establishi­ng a much more conducive political atmosphere in parliament.

“When we met the president, we then learnt that he was already writing to parliament to ask for the postponeme­nt of Sona,” said Mbete.

“... These actions are being taken in the best interests of parliament and the country.”

‘‘ Postponing Sona in the best interests of parliament and the country

 ?? /REUTERS/SUMAYA HISHAM ?? President Jacob Zuma leaves Tuynhuys, the office of the Presidency at parliament in Cape Town, after the announceme­nt yesterday that his State of the Nation Address had been postponed.
/REUTERS/SUMAYA HISHAM President Jacob Zuma leaves Tuynhuys, the office of the Presidency at parliament in Cape Town, after the announceme­nt yesterday that his State of the Nation Address had been postponed.
 ?? /CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Jacob Zuma had “fruitful and constructi­ve engagement­s, on various issues” with Cyril Ramaphosa last night.
/CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES President Jacob Zuma had “fruitful and constructi­ve engagement­s, on various issues” with Cyril Ramaphosa last night.
 ?? /SUMAYA HISHAM ?? National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete announces the postponeme­nt of Sona.
/SUMAYA HISHAM National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete announces the postponeme­nt of Sona.

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