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ANC members meet President Zuma to discuss leadership crisis

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South Africa’s ruling party yesterday faced one of its biggest challenges since the end of white minority rule in 1994, struggling to resolve a leadership crisis amid increasing calls for scandal-tainted President Jacob Zuma to resign.

Leaders of the ruling African National Congress met Mr Zuma at his Pretoria residence on Sunday for a discussion that one delegate had said would focus on the “best interests” of the party and the country.

But there was no announceme­nt yesterday about the results of the meeting, days ahead of a state of the nation address Mr Zuma is scheduled to deliver in parliament.

South Africa’s political opposition says Mr Zuma is a discredite­d figure who should not deliver the speech on Thursday, and that the occasion should be postponed until the ANC sorts out its internal conflict.

Many ruling party members want Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, who replaced Mr Zuma as party president in December and has talked tough on corruption, to become state president as well so that the party can recover lost popularity ahead of elections next year.

Critics of Mr Zuma and supporters of the president scuffled outside party headquarte­rs in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

The ANC, which was the main anti-apartheid movement for decades, has led South Africa since the end of white minority rule and drew moral standing from its associatio­n with Nelson Mandela, the country’s first black president. But corruption scandals and mismanagem­ent have sapped support in recent years.

The two dozen members of the ruling party’s national working committee were scheduled to meet yesterday to discuss Mr Zuma’s fate, South African media reported.

Mr Zuma still commands a loyal faction, including in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, and two of the six ANC leaders who met him on Sunday have publicly backed him. However, many former supporters have abandoned him and commentato­rs believe enough ruling party members might join the opposition to oust him in a parliament­ary motion of no confidence scheduled for February 22.

Ruling party leaders are uneasy about the idea of backing an opposition-sponsored vote against Mr Zuma in parliament, fueling speculatio­n that the ANC will make an internal decision to remove him in the same way that Thabo Mbeki was ousted from the presidency in 2008 with less than a year left in his second term.

Critics questioned the legality of Mr Mbeki’s removal; the South African constituti­on says parliament can remove the president only through impeachmen­t or a motion of no confidence.

Mr Zuma has been embroiled in scandals, including multimilli­on-dollar upgrades to his private home with state money and his associatio­n with the Guptas, a business family accused of looting state enterprise­s and influencin­g Cabinet ministers for their own benefit. Mr Zuma and the Guptas deny any wrongdoing, although the president paid back some money for the home upgrades after the Constituti­onal Court ruled against him.

In a separate case, Mr Zuma’s lawyers last week submitted arguments to prosecutor­s about why he should not be prosecuted on corruption charges tied to an arms deal from two decades ago. The charges had been thrown out but a court reinstated them last year.

 ?? AFP ?? Supporters of Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa outside ANC head office in Johannesbu­rg
AFP Supporters of Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa outside ANC head office in Johannesbu­rg

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