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Zumas election heralds instability
Patrick OKeeffe reports from South Africa
22 December 2007
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On December 14, more than 4,000 African National Congress (ANC)
delegates in the city of Polokwane in Limpopo Province cast their
votes at the ANCs 52nd annual conference to decide between
the two candidates standing for president of the organisation,
South African President Thabo Mbeki and ANC Deputy President Jacob
Zuma.
Thabo Mbeki, the current incumbent and running for a third
term, garnered 1,505 votes to Jacob Zumas 2,329, signifying
an overwhelming victory for Zuma and a humiliating defeat for
Mbeki. Images on South African television showed Zuma supporters
dancing on tables, wildly cheering in celebration whilst some
delegates from the Eastern Cape Province, an Mbeki stronghold,
openly wept. A somewhat stunned-looking Zuma with a visibly crestfallen
Mbeki in tow then took to the stage.
Zuma had the backing of five of the nine provinces as well
as the support of the ANC Youth League and the ANC Womens
League. In the run-up to the conference, the Congress of South
African Trade Unions (COSATU) alleged that delegates from Northwest
Province were being offered bribes, jobs and other financial rewards
in return for their support for Mbeki. The allegations and counter-allegations
underline the bitterness of the power struggle.
There has been much speculation as to whether the infighting
in the ANC could lead to the break-up of the tripartite alliance.
But with their candidate triumphant, it seems that COSATU and
the South African Communist Party (SACP) remain committed to the
alliance.
Congratulations came from Mangosuthu Buthelezi of the Inkatha
Freedom Party and Patricia de Lille of the Independent Democrats,
as well as the last apartheid president, F.W. de Klerk. Helen
Zille, the leader of the official opposition, the Democratic Alliance,
congratulated Zuma, but stated that it was a dismal day
for the country. Various spokesmen from the South African business
community indicated their main concern was that the ANC should
not deviate from its current economic policies. By the afternoon
of the following day, South African economic indicators remained
steady.
Elections for the remaining six top positions in the ANC took
place on the same day. At least five of the new positions are
now held by individuals perceived to be within the Zuma camp.
Zumas victory at Polokwane has opened the road to the
South African presidency in 2009. However, there are several obstacles
in the way; the most prominent are possible charges for fraud,
tax evasion, corruption, money laundering and racketeering currently
being considered by the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA).
Zumas corruption trial
In 2004, Zumas financial advisor, Schabir Shaik, became
the subject of an investigation in relation to possible fraud
and corrupt activities. During these investigations, information
about Zumas alleged acceptance of an US$80,000 bribe from
the French arms manufacturer Thales was made public. The National
Director of Public Prosecutions at the time, Bulelani Ngcuka,
stated that, in Zumas case, although there was prima facie
evidence of corruption, there were still not sufficient grounds
to charge him.
Shaik was eventually found guilty in June 2005 on two counts
of corruption and one of fraud. In his verdict, Judge Hilary Squires
also stated that there was overwhelming evidence of
a corrupt relationship between Zuma and Shaik. Shaik was sentenced
to an effective 15 years in prison. Two weeks later, Zuma was
dismissed as deputy president.
In early 2006, Zuma was charged with raping a young woman,
a family friend. In the course of the trial, he admitted to having
had unprotected sex with the woman, whom he knew to be HIV-positive.
He then told the court that he took a shower afterwards to protect
himself from infection, a statement that subjected him to much
ridicule. Zuma was eventually acquitted. Although his media image
took a battering, it did not diminish the support mainly from
his rural base in Kwa-Zulu Natal, but also increasingly from those
who have remained mired in poverty since 1994.
Following Zumas dismissal as deputy president, the National
Prosecuting Authority announced that he would be charged with
corruption. A trial date was set for June 31, 2006. However, the
case was struck off the roll by Judge Herbert Msimang, who ruled
that the prosecutions case depended on the outcome of appeals
against controversial warrants used to permit the seizure of documents
from Zumas lawyers and from Zuma personally by the Scorpionsan
elite investigative unit attached to the National Prosecuting
Authority.
Despite this setback to the prosecutions case, the NPA
obtained court orders that enabled them to extend the investigation
to the UK and Mauritius. In November 2007, the prosecutions
team went to the Supreme Court of Appeal and successfully appealed
against Judge Msimangs setting aside of the search warrants.
Zumas legal team is preparing to take this matter to the
Constitutional Court. However, this has opened the way to pressing
new charges against Zuma.
During the Scorpions August 2005 raid on the homes of
Zuma and his lawyer, Michael Hulley, some 93,000 pages of documents
were seized. These are expected to form the basis of a new charge
sheet. The main charge is that Zuma accepted an $80,000 bribe
from Alain Thetard, the representative of Thint, the local arm
of French arms giant Thales, in return for protection from potentially
damaging investigations into a South African arms deal. One of
the 14 documents being requested from Mauritian authorities is
Thetards diary, which records the appointment with Zuma.
The day after Zumas election victory, the National Director
of Public Prosecutions, Mokotedi Mpshe, stated in a radio interview
that new charges against Zuma were imminent. Besides the existing
charges of fraud and corruption, charges of tax evasion, money
laundering and racketeering would be added to the charge sheet.
In addition, there was new evidence detailing the extent of the
corrupt relationship between Zuma and Shaik, including evidence
of approximately R4 million (US$600 000) in payments from Shaik
to Zuma that continued until mid-2005. This is far more extensive
than previously thought.
Zuma and his supporters have consistently maintained that the
charges being levelled against him are part of a political conspiracy
to prevent him from becoming the president of the country.
To a considerable extent, Zumas victory is not so much
a product of his political acumen, but rather of Mbekis
deep unpopularity. When Mbeki, accompanied by his top aide Essop
Pahad, Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and Health
Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, arrived in Polokwane on Monday,
they were booed and jeered by some of the 4,000 delegates.
Mbeki has for 10 years presided over a country where a thin
layer of the population has reaped enormous benefits. However,
at least 40 percent of the population remain mired in dire poverty,
with few prospects of future improvement. Unemployment remains
high, and the Mbeki presidencys endless dithering over the
HIV/AIDS crisis has cost the lives of millions.
Dissatisfaction with the status quo has been manifested recently
in an unprecedented number of protests. The South African Police
Service recorded more than 20,000 separate demonstrations over
a two-year period between 2005 and 2007, including the longest
public sector workers strike in the countrys history.
In contrast, the period from 2004 to 2005 saw 6,000 demonstrations.
The vast majority of these demonstrations, led by grass-roots
activists, were about poor (often non-existent) service delivery
and objections to economic policies favouring big business.
COSATU and the SACP have promoted Zuma as the candidate for
the working class who might even introduce socialist measures
to alleviate their plight. It is recognised, although rarely acknowledged,
that the simmering low-level discontent could erupt into a social
conflagration. COSATU and the SACP have been working assiduously
to divert this energy into harmless channels.
However, Zuma has spent much of his time assuring big business
that there will be no significant changes in economic policy under
his presidency. The relative stability of South African markets
following his triumph indicates that South African and international
capitalism have found someone with whom they can do business.
See Also:
South Africa: conflict in ANC signals
deepening social tensions
[22 December 2007]
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