Los Angeles Times

South Africa leader says nation is recovering from uncertaint­y

- Associated press

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said Thursday that the country had begun to recover from “a period of uncertaint­y and a loss of confidence and trust” under his scandal-ridden predecesso­r, and he announced that the presidenti­al election will be on May 8.

The national elections are seen by many as a referendum on his ruling African National Congress party.

Ramaphosa, who came to power a year ago after former President Jacob Zuma was ousted by the ANC, has promised to revive the flagging economy and tackle deep-seated corruption.

He said in his state of the nation speech to Parliament that in 2019 his government would focus on five key tasks: speeding up inclusive growth, improving the education system, improving the lives of poor South Africans, stepping up the fight against corruption and strengthen­ing the state.

This year, the 25th since the end of white minority rule, South Africa should reflect on “whether we have built a society in which all South Africans, equally and without exception, enjoy their inalienabl­e rights to life, liberty and dignity,” he told lawmakers.

After he took office, South Africans experience­d a rare wave of optimism — sometimes referred to as “Ramaphoria” — following an era of bruising national politics, but many have once again grown weary of the nation’s rampant unemployme­nt, crime and corruption.

The findings of a commission of inquiry into corruption are “deeply disturbing, for they reveal a breadth and depth of criminal wrongdoing that challenges the very foundation of our democratic state,” Ramaphosa said. “Where there is a basis to prosecute, prosecutio­ns must follow swiftly and stolen public funds must be recovered urgently.”

He said a special directorat­e would be set up within the office of the new national director of public prosecutio­ns to look at the evidence and identify priority cases to investigat­e and prosecute.

The ruling party also has faced pressure over land reform as one way to right deep inequities that still exist a quarter-century after the end of apartheid.

Ramaphosa in his speech said his government supported the constituti­onal review process now underway to “unambiguou­sly set out provisions for expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on” to quicken the pace of reform.

He said the state has already identified stateowned land that will be released to create housing in urban and semi-urban areas.

The disillusio­nment among many South Africans with the ANC may be a crucial factor in the elections in May.

“We need to recognize that things are getting progressiv­ely worse for us, and we have to acknowledg­e that the reason they’re getting worse is the ANC,” Mmusi Maimane, leader of the Democratic Alliance, the main opposition party, said in his “alternativ­e” state of the nation address.

The left-wing Economic Freedom Fighters, a small but influentia­l opposition party that has disrupted the speech in past years, threatened to interrupt the address again unless Ramaphosa addressed a political donation he received from a company embroiled in a corruption scandal.

South Africa should reflect on ‘whether we have built a society in which all South Africans ... enjoy their inalienabl­e rights to life, liberty and dignity.’

— President Cyril Ramaphosa

 ?? Rodger Bosch AFP/Getty Images ?? SOUTH AFRICAN President Cyril Ramaphosa’s state of the nation address to Parliament this year came a quarter-century after the end of apartheid.
Rodger Bosch AFP/Getty Images SOUTH AFRICAN President Cyril Ramaphosa’s state of the nation address to Parliament this year came a quarter-century after the end of apartheid.

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