Zuma bemoans state of ruling ANC

Published December 17, 2017

JOHANNESBURG: South African President Jacob Zuma on Saturday blamed infighting and a failure to tackle corruption for the troubles of the ANC party, which risks losing power for the first time since the end of apartheid.

Zuma, whose reign has been marred by graft scandals, spoke at a party conference that will elect his successor as head of the ANC, though he will remain as head of state ahead of 2019 elections.

The two front-runners in the div­i­­sive party leadership race are his ex-wife and former African Union head Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, and Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, a wealthy businessman.

Zuma said that the African National Congress’s poor local election results last year “were a stark reminder that our people are not happy with the state of the ANC”.

“Petty squabbling that takes us nowhere needs to take a back seat. Our people are frustrated when we spend more time fighting among ourselves instead of solving the daily challenges they experience,” he said, adding that “factionalism has become the biggest threat to our movement”.

The ANC is still South Africa’s biggest party by far, but the 54 per cent it won in local elections last year was its worst poll result since the 1994 elections that marked the end of white-minority rule.

Opposition parties the Demo­cra­tic Alliance and Economic Free­dom Fighters are both hoping to exploit the ANC’s woes in the 2019 election, with one possible outcome being a coalition government.

Soaring unemployment and government corruption have fuelled frustration at the ANC among millions of poor black South Africans who face dire housing, inadequate education and continuing racial inequality. The five-day ANC meeting outside Johannesburg to elect a new leader is widely seen as a pivotal moment in the country’s post-apartheid history.

The battle between Dlamini-Zu­ma, backed by Zuma, and Ram­a­phosa could even split the party.

The conference started seven hours late after an acrimonious dispute over which delegates will be qualified to vote. The day of the vote remains uncertain.

Dlamini-Zuma, 68, headed the African Union commission until ear­­lier this year and is a former inte­­rior, foreign affairs and health minister.

But her critics say she would pursue Zuma’s failing economic and political policies, and would be his proxy to protect him from criminal prosecution over graft allegations. The couple had four children toge­ther before divorcing in 1998.

Published in Dawn, December 17th, 2017

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