Cyril Ramaphosa seeks re-election as ruling party head
Cyril Ramaphosa seeks re-election as ruling party head
South Africa’s ruling ANC was due to elect a new leader this weekend after the country’s embattled president Cyril Ramaphosa.
President
Cyril Ramaphosa
meets with ANC Structures including BECs, the RECs, PEC, as well as the Alliance who were gathered at the Mittah Seperepere Convention Centre in Kimberly, Northern Cape. Image Twitter/
African National Congress
South Africa’s ruling ANC was due to elect a new leader this weekend after the country’s embattled president Cyril Ramaphosa pitched to steer the graft-tainted party for a second term.
Despite a damaging cash-heist scandal and vociferous internal opposition, Ramaphosa, 70, is tipped to win re-election as the head of the African National Congress (ANC) at a five-day party conference that kicked off on Friday.
After 28 years in power, the party shaped by Nelson Mandela to spearhead the struggle to end apartheid faces deep rifts and declining support.
Its image has been stained by corruption, cronyism, nepotism and a lacklustre economic record.
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In a three-hour-long address on Friday, Ramaphosa sought to project confidence and authority, cautioning South Africans “expect us to have the courage and the honesty to recognise our shortcomings and the resolve to correct them”.
Almost three decades after the end of white-minority rule, unemployment and crime rates are sky high, poverty and inequality remain widespread, and power cuts have hit record levels amid a worsening energy crisis.
The conference was running well behind schedule on Saturday, after starting several hours late the day before.
But party officials said the party’s more than 4,000 delegates were still expected to vote for their new leader.
The delays caused some to grumble.
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“It is extremely frustrating,” one delegate from the eastern KwaZulu-Natal province who preferred not to give his name.
On Friday, dozens of delegates — largely supporters of corruption-tainted former president Jacob Zuma who was forced out by Ramaphosa — heckled the current South African leader, chanting “Change! Change!” and banging on their tables.
Ramaphosa called for “discipline” and “political consciousness” urging attendees to debate issues instead of “shouting” and “howling at each other”.
RAMAPHOSA WILL ‘COME BACK’
Portraying himself as a graft-busting champion, Ramaphosa took control of the ANC in 2017 after his then boss Zuma became mired in corruption allegations.
But his clean-hands image has been dented by accusations he concealed a huge cash burglary at his farm in 2020, rather than report it to the authorities.
Ramaphosa won a reprieve ahead of the conference when the ANC used its majority in parliament to block a possible impeachment inquiry.
Despite calls from some in his party to step down over the scandal, he still leads the list of only two nominated presidential candidates so far.
Senior ANC executive committee member and former cabinet minister Derek Hanekom said calling for Ramaphosa to resign over the farm controversy without being charged wasn’t how things were done in the 110-year-old party.
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“We’ve never done that in the ANC,” Hanekom told AFP on the sidelines of the conference.
Party delegate Mike Mtsweni, 28, was confident Ramaphosa would “come back” as party leader.
Ramaphosa’s rival is his former health minister Zweli Mkhize, who is facing corruption allegations linked to Covid-19 funds.
An ex-trade unionist, Ramaphosa fronted the historic negotiations to end apartheid in 1994 and helped draft the constitution — considered to be one of Africa’s most progressive charters.
RAMAPHOSA V ZUMA
On Friday, he was captured on camera laughing and shaking hands with Zuma, who is leading internal opposition to his rule.
Earlier, Zuma had made a grand entrance in the conference hall just as Ramaphosa begun delivering his speech, forcing the president to briefly pause.
On the eve of the conference, Zuma announced he was seeking to sue Ramaphosa over a leaked medical report linked to a corruption trial involving him in the 1990s.
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But the action is unlikely to hamper Ramaphosa’s chances of securing a second term as ANC chief.
The party has lost its grip over key cities in municipal elections and its local government electoral showing slumped last year to under 50 percent for the first time in its history.
But it remains the country’s largest party.