by Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
Jacob Zuma, South Africa’s current president, is not a nice man. His
political career was written off in the run-up to the 2009 election when
he was simultaneously battling allegations of rape and corruption. Yet
he managed to prevail, and was re-elected in 2014.
Critics charge Zuma with having replaced the idealism and ethics
associated with the late Nelson Mandela with a brutal and avaricious bid
for wealth and power, dividing the governing African National Congress
(ANC), and tarnishing the reputation of the post-apartheid “rainbow
nation.”
Zuma’s years in office have been marked by a series of scandals,
including the use of millions of dollars in government funds to renovate
his private home; accusations that Indian businessmen close to him
offered to dole out powerful government posts in exchange for favorable
treatment; and his appointment of allies with little experience to
important positions in government and state-owned companies.
Zuma’s credibility was severely damaged in March 2016 when the
country’s Constitutional Court ruled that he had violated the
constitution by failing to repay the government for money used on
upgrading his private residence. He apologized for the “frustration and
confusion” caused by the scandal and repaid the money.
Zuma has also been accused of allowing members of the Indian-born
Gupta family to wield undue influence over his regime. They moved to
South African from India in 1993, and started a number of businesses
through which they have amassed great wealth.
More than 100,000 documents and emails leaked to the press earlier
this year detailed improper dealings in lucrative government contracts
made with the family. Allies of Zuma have been linked to allegations
involving suspected kickbacks.
One of President Zuma’s wives, Bongi Ngema-Zuma, worked for the
Guptas, and two of Zuma’s children have served as directors in some of
the Gupta family companies.
Not coincidentally, the Guptas were granted citizenship long before the law warranted it.
In March 2016, deputy Finance Minister Mcebisi Jonas asserted that a
member of the Gupta family had offered to promote him to the post of
finance minister in 2015.
He said that Ajay Gupta offered him the position as well as 600
million rand (about $56 million), and told him the family had already
made six billion rand from the state planned to take that money to
Dubai.
All of this has hurt the ANC. In municipal elections held in August
2016 the party suffered steep declines in support in nearly all of South
Africa’s major urban areas. In Pretoria, the Democratic Alliance eked
out a victory, with 43 per cent of the votes to the ANC’s 41 per cent.
Zuma has now survived six votes of no-confidence in parliament, most
recently this past August, when a broad coalition of opposition parties
and renegade members of his own ANC fell just short of the majority
needed to force Zuma and his cabinet to resign.
The Democratic Alliance’s Mmusi Maimane told reporters that “I
applaud the courageous ANC people who moved across and said we will vote
with our conscience and we will vote for change.”
Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, said the vote
had proved South Africa's democracy works, and warned Zuma it proved
they could unseat him.
A petition signed by more than a million people was delivered to the
deputy president, Cyril Ramaphosa, who is seen as Zuma’s main rival in
the ANC.
The party is now torn by factionalism. Over 60 people have been
assassinated in intra-ANC killings in the province of KwaZulu-Natal
alone in the past two years.
But some analysts believe that with Zuma due to step down as ANC
leader in December and as president after general elections in 2019, he
intends to back one of his ex-wives, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, as his
successor.
He hopes that she will shield him from any further investigations
involving 783 allegations of theft, fraud, and money-laundering.
The economy is now officially in recession and unemployment, reaching
nearly 28 per cent, has hit a 14-year high, as the economy is stifled
by corruption and mismanagement.
There is an almost complete lack of new investment, more businesses
are closing than opening, and real incomes are steadily falling.
The health and education systems are a shambles, and community
protests have now become an everyday occurrence throughout the country.
The title of the novel Cry, the Beloved Country, by Alan Paton, published in 1948, is more apt than ever.
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