Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

President Zuma wants ANC dissenters punished

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JOHANNESBU­RG — South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma wants the African National Congress to identify and punish party members who voted against him in a no-confidence motion in parliament last week.

Some 30 ANC lawmakers supported the opposition motion in a secret ballot on August 8, not enough for it to pass but the defection exposed rifts within the ANC that could weaken Zuma’s ability to influence the choice of next party leader at elections in December.

Addressing an ANC meeting late on Sunday, Zuma called the defectors “people who have double hearts, one for the ANC and one for other parties,” and said they “must be taken to the (ANC) disciplina­ry committee,” South African media reported.

“What our enemies (opposition members of parliament) were doing was to say: ‘How can we destroy the ANC and weaken it, so that we can take control of the country?’ ... We should never do it again,” Zuma was quoted as saying.

It was unclear how the party would be able to determine who had voted against Zuma or what action could be taken against them. The president said he would discuss the issue of dissenters at a meeting of the ANC yesterday.

ANC communicat­ions officials were unavailabl­e to comment.

Critics say Zuma’s priority is to ensure he retains sufficient control over the party to ensure that his chosen candidate succeeds him as leader so he can avoid scrutiny over corruption allegation­s that have dogged his eight years in power. Zuma has denied wrongdoing.

The opposition sought to oust Zuma after he removed finance minister Pravin Gordhan in March, a move that hit the financial markets and prompted two credit ratings agencies to downgrade South Africa’s debt rating to junk status.

Following the failure of the no-confidence motion, the main opposition Democratic Alliance party said it would bring a motion to dissolve parliament and call a general election. The ANC, which has a strong majority in the assembly, dismissed the DA’s call as “dreams and hallucinat­ions”.

Meanwhile, outh Africa’s public prosecutio­n service, which is investigat­ing alleged corruption in the awarding of government contracts, has denied reports that it will not accept leaked emails as evidence against President Jacob Zuma’s allies.

The allegation­s of influence-peddling in the so-called “State Capture” affair are deepening a divide in the ruling ANC party as factions jostle for control before a conference in December where Zuma’s successor as party leader will be chosen.

In June, media began reoprting on more than 100 000 documents and emails leaked from inside the business empire of the Gupta family, which is close to Zuma. The Guptas have said the leaks are fake.

Zuma and the Guptas have denied wrongdoing. A family spokesman last month said the allegation­s were false and part of a “blatantly political campaign”.— AP.

 ??  ?? President Jacob Zuma
President Jacob Zuma

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