Sunday Tribune

Zuma versus IEC: A battle of constituti­onal democracy

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constituti­onal democracy.

“From a distance, it might look like the IEC is trying to prevent Zuma from making a re-entry into politics because, when the Concourt sentenced Zuma, it was presumed that it was the end of his political career because the sentence couldn’t be appealed.

“The Electoral Court has explained and clarified why Zuma cannot be prevented from returning to Parliament.

“I don’t think there’s bias against the former president by the IEC. There has been a grey area and it becomes a process of constituti­onal democracy to clarify this so that, in the future, such matters are best tackled,” said Makgoba.

Weighing in on reports suggesting that the ruling party, which has publicly rejected the formation of the MKP, was using state organs to oppose Zuma, former Fees Must Fall and youth activist Mcebo Dlamini said the abuse of state resources by some individual­s could not be ruled out.

“Some believe the judiciary is being used to fight political battles. This accusation is not new. There have been in the past, several scholars, journalist­s and politician­s who have expressed that the South African judiciary is not as unbiased as it ought to be. Can one really blame this view?

“The formation of MKP will, undoubtedl­y, affect the numbers of the ANC, mainly because the candidate in question is the former president of the ANC and the country – not just any president, but a president who enjoys support from a large constituen­cy.

“With the ANC being notorious for corruption, one would not be mad if they accused the ANC of meddling with the independen­ce of the IEC. It would not be out of character for the ANC.”

Dlamini said that if the ANC was attempting to do that, then it meant that it felt threatened.

“They are threatened. How can they not be? You see it in how they have intensifie­d their campaign, how they have called upon all the elders to (take part) in the campaign.

“How can they not when their opposition comes from people who were at the centre and helm of the ANC, people who know the ‘soul’ of the organisati­on?”

Dlamini said the ANC had failed

and the party was collapsing from the inside, adding that the country was alive with possibilit­ies, including blatant corruption, and he hoped that the IEC was not involved in unscrupulo­us dealings.

A Fees Must Fall activist and PHD student at the University of Pretoria, Mbhe Mbhele, said it was no coincidenc­e that there was so much interest because the candidate in question was Zuma.

“One need not think far back to know the political power that he wields. Remember the unrest after his arrest? This is the same man who became president of the whole country amid charges of rape and corruption.

“In this situation, it therefore makes sense for one (at face value) to assume that these legal battles may just be to delay the campaign, the unity and the direction of the MK Party. One also must remember that a new political party such as MKP is vulnerable to distractio­n.

“Despite all of this, one cannot hold this assumption as the ultimate truth, because the reality of the matter is that it does raise fundamenta­l constituti­onal issues with particular regard to the interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on,” said Mbhele.

The ANC and MKP have been at loggerhead­s since Zuma announced he would campaign for the MKP against his former party in the elections.

 ?? ITUMELENG ENGLISH ?? FORMER president Jacob Zuma in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg. I Independen­t Newspapers
ITUMELENG ENGLISH FORMER president Jacob Zuma in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg. I Independen­t Newspapers

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