Los Angeles Times

South African leader on the brink

The ruling party may dump scandal-tainted President Jacob Zuma within a few days.

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com Twitter: @RobynDixon_LAT

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — Jacob Zuma, once a Teflon leader who was acquitted of rape, escaped corruption charges and survived multiple noconfiden­ce votes in Parliament, has become an embarrassm­ent to his party.

The South African president is under intense pressure to resign before his term ends next year. So far, he has refused to go. But as his enemies maneuver against him, Zuma could be ousted as early as Wednesday.

On Sunday, he resisted calls from the top six officials in the governing African National Congress to resign. On Monday, the party’s National Working Committee convened to decide what to do, calling an emergency meeting of the national executive committee, the only party body that can sack Zuma.

The meeting will be held Wednesday.

Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa won the leadership of the party at a conference in December, meaning he will become the next South African president if the ANC wins elections next year.

Publicly, Ramaphosa insists that he does not want to humiliate Zuma by forcing him out. Privately, however, Zuma’s enemies in the party want him out before Thursday, when he is due to deliver the state of the nation address to Parliament.

Many in the ANC fear that unless Zuma is removed swiftly, the party’s support in elections next year could wither. But the party is deeply divided and a move to topple Zuma may deepen the rifts.

Zuma, 75, is not the first president to face removal during his tenure. Former South African President Thabo Mbeki was toppled by the ANC in 2008, nine months before his term was due to end, in a move orchestrat­ed by Zuma’s supporters.

The corruption charges against Zuma, 783 of them, involve alleged bribes, including many from a French arms company, Thales. The charges were dropped by prosecutor­s weeks before the 2009 election, paving the way for Zuma to assume the presidency that year, but they have since been revived by a court. Several other top ANC figures have been implicated in corruption related to Thales.

Critics also claim Zuma allowed his friends from a powerful business family, the Guptas, to have so much influence that they “captured” the South African state.

A forthcomin­g commission of inquiry into the influence of the Gupta family will probably turn up embarrassi­ng revelation­s for Zuma and his son Duduzane, who was in a business partnershi­p with the family.

Under Zuma’s leadership, global ratings agencies last year downgraded South Africa’s debt rating to junk status. State-owned utilities, such as Eskom, the electricit­y provider, and the national airline, South African Airways, have required successive hefty government rescue packages to stay afloat.

Ramaphosa is a former union official who turned to business after losing out in a bid to succeed Nelson Mandela in 1999. He had interests in mining, energy, banking, telecoms and farming but surrendere­d much of his empire when he became deputy president.

An ANC announceme­nt of Wednesday’s executive committee meeting made it clear Zuma’s future was on the line.

“Amongst the issues to be tabled to the special ... meeting will be preparatio­ns for the state of the nation address and a report back from the National Working Committee on matters mandated to it, including management of the transition between the fifth and sixth administra­tion of government and pending actions in Parliament,” the party statement read.

 ?? Marco Longari AFP/Getty Images ?? SUPPORTERS of South African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa chant slogans at an anti-Jacob Zuma rally outside ANC headquarte­rs in Johannesbu­rg.
Marco Longari AFP/Getty Images SUPPORTERS of South African Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa chant slogans at an anti-Jacob Zuma rally outside ANC headquarte­rs in Johannesbu­rg.

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