Times of Suriname

Jacob Zuma defies order from South Africa’s ANC to resign

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SO8TH A)RICA - -acob Zuma has defied an ultimatum from South Africa’s ruling party to resign within hours, pitching the “Rainbow Nation” into an unpreceden­ted political crisis.

The decision to tell Zuma to stand down or face being stripped of his office was taken at a specially convened emergency session of the highest decision-making body of the African National Congress near Pretoria, the administra­tive capital, late on 0onday evening.

The meeting of the ANC’s national executive committee N(C was called after it became clear over the weekend that nearly five days of talks between Zuma, who has been South Africa’s president since

, and the deputy president, Cyril Ramaphosa, who took over the leadership of the ANC in 'ecember, had failed.

After nearly hours of heated debate, Ramaphosa and a key ally of Zuma left the meeting shortly before midnight to drive to the president’s official residence to deliver an ultimatum stand down or face “recall”, a technical term for the process of forcing an ANC official to leave their post.

However a “defiant” Zuma demanded a three month “notice period” before resigning, one ANC official briefed on the conversati­on said on condition of anonymity.

The ANC may now have to move a no-confidence motion in parliament against its own former leader. This has been described as a “nightmare option” for the party by commentato­rs. A press conference has been announced at ANC headTuarte­rs in -ohannesbur­g at pm midday G0T on Tuesday.

Zuma’s tumultuous nine years in power have been marred by economic decline and multiple charges of corruption that undermined the image and legitimacy of the party that led South Africans to freedom from apartheid in . However, the -year-old retains significan­t support inside the party and at a local level in many parts of South Africa. Ralph 0athekga, a political analyst and author, said “Zuma is not Must a person. He is a system. There are a whole lot of people whose politics fortunes are tied to his.

“We are watching a battle for the soul of the ANC. It’s a referendum on the true balance of power within the party.” The opaTue and secretive internal ANC debates and negotiatio­ns have provoked much dark humour.

Zapiro, a well-known political cartoonist, drew Zuma and Ramaphosa as gunfighter­s under a banner bearing the legend “High Noon”, corrected to “High Noonish” then “/ow Noon” and finally “Whenever”.

(Guardian)

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