Tag: Cyril Ramaphosa

  • Ramaphosa replaces Zuma as new ANC leader

    Ramaphosa replaces Zuma as new ANC leader

    Cyril Ramaphosa has been elected as the new leader of South Africa’s ruling ANC (African National Congress) party after a tense battle with his rival, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma.

    According to independent.co.uk, this means the current Deputy President is likely to succeed his boss, Jacob Zuma, as President when his term expires in 2019. 

    His election came at the end of a gruelling campaign which risked splitting the party in two as factions loyal to him and Ms Dlamini-Zuma, became embroiled in fierce infighting with lawsuits filed by both sides and even physical clashes.

     

    In the end Mr Ramaphosa won 51.8 per cent of the vote with 2,440 of the 4,708 delegates who voted casting their vote for the former trade union boss turned millionaire businessman.

    Ms Dlamini-Zuma won 2,261 votes. A total of 4,776 attended the conference in Johannesburg but 68 either abstained from voting or spoilt their ballots.

    The vote was originally due to be announced around 5pm local time (3pm GMT) but was reportedly held up after Ms Dlamini-Zuma requested a recount, News24 reported.

    The vote is likely to worry Mr Zuma as he is currently facing 783 criminal charges, mostly related to corruption, and Mr Ramaphosa – who campaigned on an anti-corruption ticket – has suggested in the past that he may force him to step down early.  

    Zuma is most notorious for his connection to the Gupta family who are accused of exploiting their connection with him to have undue influence over the government.

    Critics have accused brothers Ajay, Atul and Rejesh Gupta of trying to “capture the state” to advance their business interests and former deputy finance minister Mcebisi Jonas said a member of the family had offered to promote him in 2015.

    Courtesy: independent.co.uk

  • 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

  • Ramaphosa gets most nominations ahead of ANC vote

    Ramaphosa gets most nominations ahead of ANC vote

    South African Deputy President, Cyril Ramaphosa, has received the most nominations for leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) ahead of a party vote this month, voting data from the country’s nine provinces show.

    Cyril is one of two frontrunners in a closely watched contest to take over from President Jacob Zuma as ANC leader at a party conference starting on December 16, Reuters reported.

    Whoever becomes ANC leader will most likely be the next president of South Africa, owing to the ruling party’s electoral dominance.

    Ramaphosa received 1,862 nominations by ANC branches, whereas his main rival for the ANC leadership, former cabinet minister, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, received 1,309 endorsements.

     

  • 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

  • Sacked S. Africa’s finance minister says intelligence report used to fire him “nonsense”

    South Africa’s outgoing Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said on Friday an intelligence report President Jacob Zuma used as justification to fire him was “absolute nonsense”.

    Gordhan also said during a televised press conference in Pretoria that he had been “sickened” by allegations that he had secret meetings to undermine the government during an investor roadshow abroad.

    In a similar vein, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa said on Friday he told Zuma that he disagreed with his decision to sack Gordhan.

    “I told the President so, that I would not agree with him on his reasoning to remove the minister of finance,” Ramaphosa told reporters.

    However, Ramaphosa also told public broadcaster SABC TV that the government would remain stable after the sacking of Gordhan and would tell ratings agencies that its institutions were strong.

    Zuma’s midnight sacking of his finance minister shook South African financial markets and increased the chances of costly downgrades to its investment grade sovereign ratings.

    NAN reports that Appointed in 2015 after a predecessor’s sudden sacking, Gordhan was in London for the first leg of a week-long non-deal investor roadshow in Britain and the U.S.

    Weak economic growth and tensions within the ruling party African National Congress (ANC) have put South Africa’s investment grade credit rating at risk.

    The rand fell as much as 1.7 per cent following the report, while bonds weakened sharply.

    Banking shares on the Johannesburg bourse fell more than two per cent.

    A government source said: “they were told last night or this morning to come back… the presidency did not give permission for the trip.”

    The president’s office could not be reached for comment.

    Africa’s most industrialised economy escaped being downgraded to junk status last year.

    S and P Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings both rank the sovereign one level above junk, while Moody’s puts it two notches higher.

    Moody’s, which put South Africa on negative watch in its latest review, is due to revisit that on April 7, followed by S and P at the beginning of June.

    Gordhan’s team on the trip to London, Boston and New York included deputy finance minister Mcebisi Jonas and Treasury director general Lungisa Fuzile, as well as business executives and union leaders.

     

  • South Africa’s union backs Ramaphosa for presidency

    Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa saw his chances of becoming South Africa’s next leader increase on Thursday when a powerful union group backed him to succeed President Jacob Zuma as head of the ruling party.

    Zuma is expected to stand down as African National Congress (ANC) president at a party conference in December next year, ahead of national elections in 2019 when his tenure as president will end, Reuters reported.

    Ramaphosa, a former anti-apartheid leader popular with investors, is likely to face strong competition if he does throw his hat in the ring, including from Zuma’s ex-wife, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, who is head of the African Union.

    No one has declared an ambition to compete but unofficial jockeying has begun and the debate over who should succeed Zuma has heated up since the ANC suffered its worst local election results in August, exposing party divisions.

    A split has emerged between those who want a successor loyal to Zuma, and a faction that wants a fresh start under Ramaphosa.

    The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), which is part of the ruling political alliance and claims to represent 1.8 million workers, became the latest to weigh in, telling reporters it had “resolved to campaign” for Ramaphosa.

    “This is a victory for the camp opposing Zuma and backing Cyril,” said political analyst Nic Borain. “They are still up against it because Jacob Zuma’s support base is dominant, but Cyril is still very much in the game.”

  • Thousands defy rain to pay tributes to Mandela

    Thousands defy rain to pay tributes to Mandela

    United States President Barack Obama led world tributes yesterday to Nelson Mandela, hailing him as “a giant of history” at a rain-soaked memorial attended by tens of thousands of South Africans united in proud, noisy celebration.

    Obama was one of close to 100 world leaders at the event in Soweto’s World Cup stadium, where songs of praise and revolution, many harking back to the apartheid era that Mandela helped condemn to history, echoed down from the dancing crowds in the stands.

    “It is hard to eulogise any man … how much harder to do so for a giant of history, who moved a nation towards justice,” Obama said, after being introduced to wild cheers.

    “He was not a bust made of marble, he was a man of flesh and blood,” Obama said of the prisoner-turned-president whose life story earned uncommon universal respect.

    The four-hour event began at midday (1000 GMT) with a stirring rendition of the national anthem, Nkosi Sikelel’ iAfrika (God Bless Africa), led by a mass choir and picked up with enthusiasm by the rest of the stadium.

    Some 80,000 had been expected, but the venue was two-thirds full as the ceremony got underway under a curtain of rain that had been falling since the early morning.

    Despite the profound sense of national sorrow triggered by Mandela’s death last Thursday, the mood was upbeat, with people determined to celebrate the memory of one of the 20th century’s towering political figures.

    “His long walk is over, he can finally rest,” African National Congress (ANC) Vice President Cyril Ramaphosa said in an opening address.

    On several occasions, Ramaphosa felt forced to admonish boisterous sections of the crowd for chanting during the speeches.

    In his tribute, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon noted that Mandela had managed to unite people in death, much as he had in life.

    “Look around this stage … we see leaders representing many points of view … all here, all united,” he said.

    Before taking to the stage, Obama shook hands with Raul Castro, leader of long-time Cold War rival Cuba.

    The handshake was seen by millions watching the memorial being broadcast live around the world, and comes as Obama tries to make good on his vow to reach out even to the most implacable of US foes.

    Crowds had begun gathering at the Soweto stadium before daybreak and, as the gates opened, they swarmed inside the venue where Mandela made his last major public appearance at the 2010 World Cup final.

    Wrapped in the South African flag or yellow-green coloured shawls printed with the slogan “Mandela Forever”, they danced and sang — oblivious to the constant drizzle.

    “He’s God given, he’s God taken. We will never stop to cherish him,” said Shahim Ismail, who took a day off from the sports academy he runs in Johannesburg to attend the event.

    “This is once in your life. This is history,” said Noma Kova, 36. “I didn’t want to watch this on TV.”

    Mandela’s widow, Graca Machel, received a huge ovation as she took her seat on the main stage constructed at one end of the pitch.

    News of Mandela’s death at his home in Johannesburg resonated around the world, triggering a wave of loving admiration from political and religious leaders, some of whom agree on little else.

    In a nod to Mandela’s extraordinary global reach, popularity and influence, the Indian, Brazilian and Namibian presidents, as well as Castro and the vice president of China all delivered eulogies.

    Obama took a swipe at authoritarian leaders who spoke of embracing Mandela’s legacy without acting upon it.

    “There are too many leaders who claim solidarity with Madiba’s struggle for freedom, but do not tolerate dissent from their own people,” he said,

    The memorial event was part of an extended state funeral that will culminate in Mandela’s burial on Sunday in the rural village of Qunu where he spent his early childhood.

    South African President Jacob Zuma, who was roundly booed by sections of the crowd in a reflection of growing public dissatisfaction with the current generation of ANC leaders, hailed Mandela as “fearless freedom fighter”.

    “In his honour, we commit ourselves to continue building a nation based on democratic values, of human dignity and democracy,” Zuma said.

    Although Mandela had been critically ill for months, the announcement of his death was a body blow for this recently reborn nation.

    He had been out of public life for more than a decade, but South Africans looked to his unassailable moral authority as a comforting constant in a time of uncertain social and economic change.

    Ahead of the burial in Qunu, Mandela’s body will lie in state for three days from Wednesday in the amphitheatre of the Union Buildings in Pretoria where he was sworn in as president in 1994.

    Each morning, his coffin will be borne through the streets of the capital in a funeral cortege.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron, French President Francois Hollande and Afghan President Hamid Karzai were among the leaders attending the memorial ceremony.

    “We were told it was appropriate to wear a black tie,” Cameron said after arriving at the stadium in Soweto.

    “But when you come and you hear this great noise and this great atmosphere of celebration, it is clear that people here in South Africa want to, yes, say goodbye to this great man, yes commemorate what he did, but also celebrate his life and celebrate his legacy,” he said.

    Singer-activist Bono and South African actress Charlize Theron were among the celebrity mourners.