Tag: ANC

  • ANC proposes unity government after losing majority

    ANC proposes unity government after losing majority

    The African National Congress (ANC) has proposed forming a government of national unity after losing its parliamentary majority for the first time since the end of apartheid.

    The ANC’s share of the vote plummeted from 57.5% in 2019 to 40.2% in the recent May 29 election, driven by high unemployment, degraded public services, and the emergence of new political challenges.

    The ANC’s influential national working committee has recommended this multiparty approach, recognizing the need for a coalition to ensure stable governance.

    ANC spokesperson, Mahlengi Bhengu-Motsiri emphasiSed the party’s commitment to this path during a press briefing, stating: “The conversation is looking at a government of national unity, because this is what the people of South Africa have said to us: put together a multiparty arrangement that works for the benefit of South Africa,”

    The proposal is set to be discussed by the ANC’s national executive committee later this week.

    The Democratic Alliance (DA), South Africa’s second-largest party, has firmly opposed any coalition involving the Marxist-inspired Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), the fourth-largest party.

    DA spokesperson, Solly Malatsi reiterated the party’s stance, warning against a “doomsday coalition” with the EFF or the newly formed uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party, which secured a surprising third place.

    Both the EFF and MK advocate for radical policies such as nationalizing the central bank and seizing land from white farmers.

    Read Also: Minimum wage: Committee adjourns to allow Finance Minister meet deadline

    EFF leader, Julius Malema has also dismissed the idea of a government of national unity, cautioning against including parties he views as unsuitable.

    “We don’t want a government of national unity; we will end up with the wrong people,” Malema asserted.

    Despite these challenges, political analysts like Marisa Lourenço suggest that practical considerations might drive the DA and EFF to collaborate.

    “There’s a lot of power attached to being in a government of national unity,”

    Lourenço noted, indicating that the desire for influence might override ideological differences.

    Meanwhile, the MK party, led by former president Jacob Zuma, has refused to engage with the ANC under President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    MK spokesperson, Nhlamulo Ndhlela announced that the party is preparing a legal challenge to the election results and has not been in contact with the ANC since initial overtures during the vote counting.

  • ANC president  salutes Team Nigeria medallists

    ANC president  salutes Team Nigeria medallists

    The President of the All Nigeria Community (Ghana Chapter), Chief Bayo Albert Asaolu, has congratulated the Nigerian athletes who have won medals so far at the ongoing  African Games in Accra, Ghana.

    said the athletes have made the nation proud in their various disciplines, and he believes the nation will scoop more medals.

    The ANC President, in a statement, said he has personally watched the representatives from Nigeria while applauding them for putting in their best efforts. He commended the technical teams for the discipline exhibited by the athletes.

     “I watched our boys and girls showing serious commitment at all their events. Even those who could not win medals gave a good account of themselves. As we all know, this is our Olympic Games in Africa. I am truly impressed with the performances of our sportsmen and women,” he said.

    Read Also: Minister Splashes $25,000 on Team Nigeria medallists in Birmingham

    He charged the athletes not to relent in their efforts and expected them to win more medals for the nation. He assured the athletes of the continuous support of the Nigerian community living in Ghana. The ANC leader also commended Ghana for the standard of the facilities and organization, which he has rated as excellent. “I live in Accra here, and I couldn’t imagine the edifice that has been put up at the University of Ghana Stadium. Ghana is indeed prepared,” Asaolu said.

    He concluded by encouraging Africans to use the event to foster strong relationships among the member states as he called on the African Union (AU) to learn from this and build on the unity that the games have offered.

    On the last count, Egypt is the clear medal leader with a total of 85 medals (48 gold, 19 silver, and 18 bronze), while Nigeria ranks second on the table with a total of 41 medals (16 gold, 10 silver, 15 bronze).

    Algeria has a total of 55 medals (15 gold, 20 silver, 20 bronze), South Africa has so far scooped 50 medals (12 gold, 16 silver, 22 bronze), and Mauritius has only 7 medals (3 gold, 3 silver, 1 bronze). At the last edition in Rabat, Morocco, four years ago, the Egyptians led the way with 260 medals and 94 gold medals, more than twice as many as the second nation, Nigeria, with 46 gold medals.

  • Awori leaders seek stiffer penalties against ballot box snatching, others

    The Awori Traditional Council (ATC) and the Awori Natives Coalition (ANC) have called for the review of electoral offences to make punishment for offenders more impactful.

    The two bodies said imprisonment for ballot box snatching and other electoral offences were not enough to deter sponsors and perpetrators.

    ATC and ANC called for “stiffer penalties” to send a strong signal to those wishing to perpetrate electoral violence.

    In a communique jointly signed by the Olota of Ota, Oba (Prof.) Adeyemi Obalanlege on behalf of ATC and the President of ANC, Chief Oye Taiwo, in Ota, the two bodies noted that the three-year imprisonment without any option of fine for electoral malpractices stipulated in Section 123 and Section 5 of the Electoral Act, 2010, as amended, was not a sufficient deterrent to electoral offenders.

    They said the tendency towards political intolerance among politicians was anti-progress.

    The two bodies urged politicians to shun the politics of do-or-die.

    They also threatened to invoke the spirits of their ancestors and unleash them against anyone fomenting trouble in Awori land.

    ATC and ANC advised electoral officials, especially National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members, against acts that could jeopardise the electoral process or put their future in jeopardy.

    Oba Obalanlege stressed the need to ensure that electoral offenders are brought to justice in accordance with the provisions of the law to stop impunity that are often displayed by some politicians and their agents during polls.

    Taiwo said: “There is need for traditional rulers to prevail on political gladiators in their domains to ensure peaceful conduct by their supporters, before, during and after the elections.”

     

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  • Zuma slams moves to force him out as ‘very unfair’

    Zuma slams moves to force him out as ‘very unfair’

    Zuma said in his first public remarks, a day after the ANC formally asked him to resign.

    During more than a week of negotiations with the ANC’s key decision-making body, Zuma said that “nobody provided the reasons, nobody has been able to provide me with what I have done.”

    The ANC had urged Zuma to resign due to a string of corruption allegations.

    Zuma denied any wrongdoing on Wednesday.

    “There is no problem. There has never been a problem,” he said in the televised remarks.

    Earlier in the day police had raided the home of a business family linked to the embattled leader.

    Zuma says the ruling ANC has not followed party procedures in trying to unseat him.

    Read Also:  Zuma to face no-confidence vote on Thursday – ANC

    The ANC wants parliament to vote on Thursday on a motion of no confidence if he does not resign on Wednesday.

    “I need to be furnished on what I’ve done,” Mr Zuma says. “What is this hurry?”
    Agents from the Hawks, an elite police investigative unit, earlier entered the compound of the Gupta family in an affluent neighbourhood of Johannesburg.

    Three people were arrested in operations at various addresses, the South African Broadcasting Corporation reported.

    The family is suspected of using its connections to the president to influence Cabinet appointments and win state contracts, and has been a flashpoint for national anger over corruption in state enterprises during Mr Zuma’s tenure.

    Both the Guptas and Mr Zuma say they have done nothing wrong.

    ANC Secretary-General Ace Magashule makes a statement after the ruling party said scandal-tainted President Jacob Zuma must leave office .

    Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is poised to replace Mr Zuma, who could face a motion of no confidence in parliament if he defies his party’s order to step down.

    Deputy President and ANC party president Cyril Ramaphosa is expected to take over from Jacob Zuma .

    As the Gupta-linked investigation proceeds, Mr Zuma could face corruption charges tied to an arms deal two decades ago.

    South Africa’s chief prosecutor is expected to make a decision on whether to prosecute Mr Zuma on the old charges, which were reinstated in 2017 after being thrown out in 2009.

    In another scandal, South Africa’s top court ruled in 2016 that Mr Zuma violated the constitution following an investigation of multimillion-dollar upgrades to his private home using state funds.

    The president paid back some of the money.

    NAN

  • ANC pushes for Zuma’s resignation

    ANC pushes for Zuma’s resignation

    South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) confirmed yesterday it had decided to sack President Jacob Zuma, but said leading members had agreed on when he should go.

    The ANC’s Secretary-General, Ace Magashule, said the decision to recall Zuma – party-speak for ‘remove from office’ – was taken after “exhaustive discussions”.

    The rand turned weaker after the ANC said it had not given Zuma a deadline to resign, softening 0.2 per cent to a session low of 11.9450 at 12:18 GMT from 11.8800 before Magashule’s news conference.

    The decision by the ANC’s national executive followed 13 hours of tense deliberations and one, short face-to-face exchange between Zuma and his presumed successor, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    Zuma, a polygamous Zulu traditionalist, has been living on borrowed time since Ramaphosa, a union leader and lawyer, once tipped as Mandela’s pick to take over the reins, was elected as head of the 106-year-old ANC in December.

    Ramaphosa narrowly defeated Zuma’s ex-wife and preferred successor, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, in the leadership vote, forcing him to tread carefully in handling Zuma for fear of deepening rifts in the party a year ahead of an election.

    In spite of the damning decision to order Zuma’s “recall” – ANC-speak for ‘remove from office’ – domestic media say the 75-year-old might yet defy the party’s wishes, forcing it into the indignity of having to unseat him in parliament.

    Shortly before midnight, the SABC state broadcaster said Zuma had been told in person by Ramaphosa that he had 48 hours to resign.

    A senior party source later told Reuters Zuma made it clear he was going nowhere.

    “Cyril went to speak with him; the discussions were “tense and difficult” when Ramaphosa returned to the ANC meeting in a hotel near Pretoria.

    “We decided to recall Zuma,” the source said.

    Read Also: Zuma asked to resign as South African President

    Another party source said ANC Secretary-General and Zuma loyalist Ace Magashule had gone to see Zuma on Tuesday morning to tell him formally of the party’s decision.

    The ANC is due to hold a news conference in the afternoon to reveal its version of events.

    One domestic report said Zuma asked for three months to resign, a request that was denied. Another report said Zuma simply told Ramaphosa: “Do what you want to do”.

    Zuma’s spokesman did not answer his calls. His son, Edward, said he would not comment until after the ANC had made its formal pronouncement.

    On Friday, one of his wives, Tobeka Madiba-Zuma, posted comments on Instagram suggesting Zuma, who has challenged and defied multiple attempts by the ANC and courts to rein him in, was prepared to go down fighting.

    The post even suggested Zuma believed he was the victim of a Western conspiracy.

    “He will finish what he started because he does not take orders beyond the Atlantic Ocean,” she said.

    South Africa’s economy, the most sophisticated on the continent, has stagnated during Zuma’s nine-year tenure, with banks and mining companies reluctant to invest because of policy uncertainty and rampant corruption.

    However, since mid-November when Ramaphosa emerged as a real ANC leadership prospect, economic confidence has started to pick up, while the rand – a telling barometer of Zuma’s fortunes – has gained more than 15 per cent against the dollar.

    The ANC’s decisive overnight move against Zuma, after nearly two weeks of deliberations, mirrors the fate that he himself meted to then-President Thabo Mbeki in 2008, after being elected to the helm of the party.

    The removal of Zuma, an anti-apartheid activist who spent 10 years with Mandela in the notorious Robben Island prison camp, also echoes generational changes in the anti-colonial liberation movements in charge of southern Africa.

    In August, Jose Eduardo dos Santos stepped down after 38 years as president of oil-rich Angola and three months later, Zimbabwe’s military unseated 93-year-old Robert Mugabe, the only leader the country had known since independence in 1980.

    Although Zuma retains a core of faithful inside the ANC and in the rural heartlands of his native KwaZulu-Natal province, there will be few tears shed in South Africa’s urban centers, where many regard him with contempt.

    “He’s a goner,” the Sowetan, a tabloid popular with urban black South Africans, said in a front-page headline above a picture of Zuma sitting with his head held in his hand.

    Central to the public anger have been the persistent allegations – now the focus of a judicial commission – that Zuma let his friends, the Guptas, use their relationship with him to win state contracts and even influence cabinet appointments.

  • ANC holds ‘fruitful’ talks with Zuma

    ANC holds ‘fruitful’ talks with Zuma

    South Africa’s governing party, the African National Congress (ANC), has postponed a top-level meeting that was expected to decide on President Jacob Zuma’s future.

    Instead the ANC released a statement saying it had held “fruitful and constructive discussions” with the President.

    The BBC reports that Mr. Zuma is under growing pressure from members of his own party to resign amid corruption allegations.

    Earlier on Tuesday, parliament took the extraordinary step of postponing Thursday’s state of the nation address.

    South Africa’s Times Live website quoted unnamed sources as saying Mr. Zuma was prepared to quit, if the right terms can be negotiated.

    The formal National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting has been set for February 17 and 18, the ANC’s party leader, Cyril Ramaphosa, said in a statement.

    The high-level group has the power to remove the President from office without his agreement.

    Opposition parties are demanding that a vote of no-confidence be held to remove him.

    Mr. Zuma, 75, was replaced as party leader by Mr. Ramaphosa, his 65-year-old deputy, in December. Mr. Ramaphosa is set to succeed him as President.

    Earlier on Tuesday, the Nelson Mandela Foundation urged Mr. Zuma to step down.

    South Africa had seen “systematic looting” under Mr. Zuma’s rule, and he “must go sooner rather than later,” the foundation said in a statement.

  • Zuma cabinet meeting not ‘special’, spokesman says

    Zuma cabinet meeting not ‘special’, spokesman says

    The Presidency said South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma was chairing routine cabinet committee meetings in Cape Town on Tuesday and not holding a “special cabinet meeting” as reported in local media.

    Bongani Ngqulunga, Zuma’s spokesman,  said a full cabinet meeting was scheduled for Wednesday.

    He dismissed speculation in domestic media the embattled president had called a meeting to discuss his future with his cabinet colleagues.

    The African National Congress ( ANC ) met on Monday to discuss Zuma’s future amid growing.

    Read also: Zuma: ANC leaders to meet on Wednesday

    pressure on the 75-year-old leader to step down as head of state over corruption allegations and a weakened economy.

    Zuma, in power since 2009, has been deserted by prominent allies since being replaced in December as ANC leader by Cyril Ramaphosa, South Africa’s deputy president, who is now lobbying behind the scenes for him to step down as president too.

    Overnight talks with top ANC officials failed to persuade him to quit, and a group of Zuma loyalists said they would march on Monday on the party’s headquarters in downtown Johannesburg, Luthuli House, in support of the president.

    ANC officials said the party had summoned its National Working Committee (NWC) to meet at 1200 GMT at Luthuli House.

    The NWC handles the day-to-day running of the ANC, which has run South Africa since the end of white minority rule in 1994.

    It would need to call a meeting of the National Executive Committee to force Zuma to quit.

    Asked about the ongoing talks surrounding Zuma, ANC spokeswoman Khusela Diko said: “There is no crisis within the ANC, we are used to robust discussions.”

    The ANC’s top six most powerful officials met Zuma late on Sunday at his official residence in Pretoria but there was no announcement of the outcome.

    After the pro-Zuma group Black First Land First announced its march on Monday, a pro-Ramaphosa faction of the ANC said it would “defend” Luthuli House, raising the prospect of clashes between different camps within the party.

    The ANC said it respected the right of citizens to protest in a disciplined and peaceful manner.

    Opposition parties and some in the ANC want Zuma to go before his state of the nation address to parliament, scheduled for Thursday.

    Zuma has not said in public whether he will step down voluntarily. But he faces a new confidence-vote in parliament against his leadership on Feb. 22 filed by the opposition far-left Economic Freedom Fighters party (EFF).

    The EFF has asked the speaker of parliament, Baleka Mbete, to allow a secret ballot for the no-confidence vote, a decision which would increase the chances of Zuma losing the vote.

    Unlike in August when Zuma survived a no-confidence vote, a significant portion of the ANC now wants him gone.

    If he lost the vote, his entire cabinet would have to step down.

    Zuma will meet Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini at 1200 GMT on Monday at the king’s residence in Ulundi in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province, said Prince Thulani Zulu, a spokesman for the Zulu royal household.

    The spokesman declined to speculate on whether the king, a key ally of Zuma, who is also a Zulu, would add his voice to those urging the president to step down.

    Zuma’s spokesman Bongani Ngqulunga said the meeting with Zwelithini was “a longstanding courtesy meeting between the President and His Majesty which was initially meant to take place in January but was postponed due to diary challenges on both sides”.

    Zwelithini is the influential traditional head of South Africa’s biggest ethnic group, with around 10 million first-language Zulu speakers out of a total population of around 55 million, but he holds no role in government.

    “Zuma would listen to the Zulu king. Zuma is a traditionalist and has a power base in KwaZulu-Natal province,” said political analyst Ralph Mathekga.

    “The king is a bargainer, he could help Cyril (Ramaphosa) heal KwaZulu-Natal after Zuma goes.”

    NAN

  • Zuma: ANC leaders to meet on Wednesday

    Zuma: ANC leaders to meet on Wednesday

    South Africa’s ruling party has called a meeting of its top body for Wednesday, amid growing pressure on President Jacob Zuma to stand down.

    In a statement, the ANC said the meeting was called to discuss the “management of the transition” between the Zuma and Ramaphosa administrations.

    On Monday, senior politicians held an emergency meeting in Johannesburg to discuss Mr. Zuma’s future.

    The BBC reports that the President has resisted calls to quit over corruption allegations.

    Mr. Zuma, 75, was replaced as party leader in December, and his deputy and successor, Cyril Ramaphosa, 65, would step into the presidency if he (Zuma) was recalled by the ANC.

    An ANC spokeswoman said the removal of President Zuma was not on the agenda at Monday’s meeting.

    The President, in power since 2009, is due to make a state of the nation address on Thursday, and some in the party want Mr. Zuma to leave office ahead of that speech.

     

  • I believed woman who accused Zuma of rape – Deputy president

    I believed woman who accused Zuma of rape – Deputy president

    South Africa Deputy President, Cyril Ramaphosa, said he believed the woman who filed rape charges against President Jacob Zuma in 2006.

    Zuma was tried and acquitted of raping Fezekile Kuzwayo, also know as Khwezi, 11 years ago, when she was a guest in his home.

    In spite the acquittal the trial damaged Zuma’s reputation, not least because Khwezi – who died in 2016, was HIV-positive and Zuma told the court that he had taken the precaution of “showering” after unprotected sex.

    Ramaphosa, who is vying with Zuma for leadership of the ANC and, therefore, the country, made the remarks during a radio interview on Thursday night.

    When pressed on the rape allegations, Ramaphosa at first demurred before saying: “Yes, I would believe her.”

    “I know how difficult and painful it is for a woman to garner up the courage to stand up and say, ‘Yes, I was raped.

    “It must be one of the most difficult decisions that she has to make,” he said.

    Ramaphosa has been Zuma’s deputy since 2014.

    Read also: Probe Okorocha over ‘statues of Zuma – Johnson Sirleaf

    On Friday, the presidency released a terse statement in response to Ramaphosa’s remarks.

    “The rape allegations against President Zuma were properly considered by a Judge of the High Court.

    Having evaluated the totality of the evidence, the court acquitted Zuma of the rape charges.

    NAN

  • Zuma again denounces ‘monopoly’ white economic power

    Zuma again denounces ‘monopoly’ white economic power

    President Jacob Zuma of South Africa reiterated his call for radical reforms to shift the balance of “monopoly” economic power away from whites who dominated under apartheid.

    He made the remarks, reiterating a staple criticism leveled by his ruling ANC about South Africa’s economy, against the backdrop of widespread allegations of corruption against Zuma and his friends, the Indian-born Gupta brothers

    Zuma said without such change blacks would stay poor for a long time.

    He was responding to a question about his role as an enemy of “white capital”, during an interview with the ANN7 news network, which was founded by the Guptas.

    Zuma and the Guptas have denied any wrongdoing.

    “I don’t know why there is a debate in fact. Because there is a monopoly capital and in South Africa it is white … because of our history, it does have a colour.

    “It is white,” Zuma, who steps down as head of the ANC in December but can remain head of state until elections due in 2019, said.

    “Companies that dominate in the mines, there are not many … You will find the same companies in charge.

    “That means they are monopolising the economy and they’re not black,” he said.

    The Chamber of Mines in the world’s top platinum producer says that in 2016, 39 per cent of the sector was owned by “historically disadvantaged South Africans”, meaning non-whites.

    Zuma said the policy of “radical economic transformation,” which has also seen moves to change the constitution to allow for the expropriation of land for redistribution to landless blacks, was needed to “correct the past.”

    “The ANC must follow this policy because if you don‘t, we are going to stay in poverty, in inequality, for a long time.”

    The frontrunners to replace Zuma at the helm of the ANC are Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, a trade unionist who amassed a fortune in the world of business, and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, former chair of the AU and Zuma’s ex-wife.

    Ramaphosa is viewed more favourably by foreign investors, who help cover the country’s deficits.

    Many of them are unsettled by Dlamini-Zuma’s calls to radically redistribute wealth and her perceived links to her former husband.

    In a separate interview on state broadcaster SABC, ANC Secretary Gen. Gwede Mantashe said “state capture is a reality,” referring to allegations that the Guptas and others have undue political influence with access to state resources and contracts under Zuma.

    Mantashe is regarded as an ally of Ramaphosa with ties that go back to the 1980s when they were involved in the founding of the National Union of Mineworkers.

    NAN