Miami Herald (Sunday)

South Africa sweeps into final election campaign weekend

- BY MOGOMOTSI MAGOME Associated Press

JOHANNESBU­RG

South Africa’s political parties swept into the final weekend of campaignin­g Saturday ahesd of Wednesday’s election in which the ruling African National Congress might find its greatest challenge from within.

Twenty-five years after apartheid ended, the party of the late Nelson Mandela is shaken by corruption allegation­s that toppled a president last year.

Top opposition parties Democratic Alliance and Economic Freedom Fighters are seizing on public frustratio­n and ANC divisions in the hope of drawing more voters and forcing the ruling party into giving up a greater share of power.

“I am angry that the very people who were elected to lead us ended up stealing from us,” DA leader Mmusi Maimane told supporters at a rally in the Soweto township of Johannesbu­rg on Saturday. “And what’s most offensive is that they stole from the poor.”

President Cyril Ramaphosa, a former Mandela protege who took office after Jacob Zuma was forced out, has vowed to tackle the graft that has sapped the very welfare programs and basic services that many South Africans badly need.

But Ramaphosa faces pushback from Zuma allies within the ANC, and some South Africans have expressed concern that despite his assured election win the party might later oust him from power.

Ramaphosa is expected to make his final appeal to voters Sunday. And so will the leader of the opposition EFF, Julius Malema, who by some measures has gained ground among voters with populist calls to seize whiteowned land without compensati­on and nationaliz­e mines and banks.

That outspoken stance has attracted some younger voters in particular as many struggle with unemployme­nt above 25%, while other South Africans worry that the EFF’s views are too extreme and could further hurt the already sluggish economy of sub-Saharan Africa’s most developed country.

“We will lift our failed economy back into real growth,” the DA’s Maimane said. “Not the ANC’s bestcase scenario of 1 percent or 1.5 percent, but proper, sustained growth that will create millions of jobs.” He said his party would privatize some unprofitab­le state-owned companies.

Race remains sensitive in South Africa. While the ANC in a tweet on Saturday accused the DA of being a “safe harbor for racists,” Maimane told the rally that his party is the only one where “blacks, whites, Indians and [mixed-race] are working together to better this country. They will not succeed in dividing us.”

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