The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ruling party leader targets corruption

Cyril Ramaphosa emphasizes need to unite the party.

- By Krista Mahr

JOHANNESBU­RG — The new leader of South Africa’s ruling party vowed Saturday to crack down on the corruption that has weakened the African National Congress in a new push to end inequities that haunt the nation more than 20 years after the end of white minority rule.

“Billions of rands have been illegally diverted to individual­s,” Cyril Ramaphosa said in a speech to celebrate the party’s 106th anniversar­y.

It was Ramaphosa’s first major public address since he was elected to lead Africa’s oldest liberation party in December, replacing scandal-prone President Jacob Zuma as party leader. He likely will be elected the next president in 2019.

Public frustratio­n over corruption allegation­s against Zuma deeply split the ANC in recent months, and Ramaphosa has been pressured by opposition parties and some ANC members to recall Zuma as president. Zuma was booed upon his arrival at Saturday’s event.

Ramaphosa instead is emphasizin­g the need to unify the party.

The ANC “has become deeply divided through factionali­sm, patronage, corruption and competitio­n for resources,” he said. “At the center of our efforts this year is unity.”

On the eve of a high-level ruling party meeting this week that had threatened to discuss his fate, Zuma acknowledg­ed the pressure, announcing Tuesday he was appointing a commission of inquiry to look into the corruption allegation­s. “This matter cannot wait any longer,” he said.

Ramaphosa on Saturday thanked Zuma for that decision.

“Corruption in stateowned enterprise­s and other public institutio­ns has undermined our government’s programs to address poverty and unemployme­nt,” Ramaphosa, also the country’s deputy president, said. “We are going to confront corruption and state capture in all its forms.”

The ANC has been in power since the country’s first democratic elections in 1994, but voters have grown disillusio­ned with the party of Nelson Mandela under Zuma’s tenure. South Africa’s economy briefly dipped into recession last year and unemployme­nt hovers close to 30 percent.

In 2016 municipal elections, the ANC lost control of the commercial hub of Johannesbu­rg and the capital, Pretoria, for the first time. Observers have warned that if support continues to dwindle, the party faces the possibilit­y of losing its national majority in 2019 and having to govern as part of a coalition.

At the party conference in December, Zuma acknowledg­ed serious challenges but pushed back against allegation­s of graft.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Newly elected ruling African National Congress party President Cyril Ramaphosa greets supporters in East London, South Africa, on Saturday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Newly elected ruling African National Congress party President Cyril Ramaphosa greets supporters in East London, South Africa, on Saturday.

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