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South Africa: Factional war intensifies between Mbeki and
Zuma supporters in ANC
By Barbara Slaughter
30 May 2006
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On May 8, Jacob Zuma, former deputy president of South Africa,
was acquitted of the charge of rape in the Johannesburg High Court.
The accusation against him was made last December, causing him
to step down from the office of vice president of the ruling African
National Congress (ANC) until a verdict was reached.
Zuma still faces a second trial regarding an alleged generally
corrupt relationship with Schabir Shaik, his former financial
advisor, who was convicted of corruption in May 2005 and sentenced
to five years in jail. President Thabo Mbeki sacked Zuma as deputy
president of the country when news of the corruption trial was
made public.
After the two-month rape trial, the judge said he accepted
as plausible the explanation that the sexual encounter
in Zumas home between the accused and his accuser was consensual.
In dismissing the complainants testimony, he said the evidence
showed she had a history of making false allegations of
rape.
Rather than putting an end to the factional warfare within
the ANC, the failure to convict Zuma means it will increase in
ferocity. Karima Brown, political editor of Business Day,
wrote, Zuma is now marching back into Luthuli House [headquarters
of the ANC]...This is a major victory for Zumas political
career.
Zuma claimed that the rape accusation was politically motivated,
part of a conspiracy organised by faceless persons
aimed at preventing him from standing as the ANC candidate in
the South African presidential elections in 2009. He mobilised
his Zulu power-base in a show of strength against the ANC leadership,
which his supporters denounce as a Xhosa-nostradominated
by politicians from the Xhosa tribe. Hundreds were bussed from
KwaZulu Natal into Johannesburg every day to demonstrate outside
the courthouse during the trial.
The Guardian accused Zuma of deliberately using tribalism
in his fight, undermining the ANCs century-old anti-tribal
philosophy. It reported his supporters claiming that he
was their 100 percent Zulu boy [who] was a victim
of Xhosas who had a stranglehold on the party.
The ANC Youth League and the Young Communist League also supported
Zuma. The South African Communist Party (SACP) is a partner, along
with the ANC and the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU),
in the coalition government. COSATU is divided over supporting
Zuma.
As soon as the trial was over, Zuma announced his intention
to take up his official positions within the ANC party leadership
as soon as possible. He claimed that he suspended himself from
office only for the duration of the case and was now ready to
resume his duties.
His supporters are calling for the rescheduling of the ANC
national conference due to be held in December 2007. They believe
Zuma is in a strong position to defeat any pro-Mbeki candidate
for the position of party president and would then be unassailable
in the 2009 South African presidential elections.
The ANC and the Tripartite Alliance are being torn apart by
the factional fighting. Sam Sole, a Mail & Guardian
columnist, recently described the fevered atmosphere of
power-lust, greed, fear, revenge and conspiracy gripping the party
as a consequence of the battle between Jacob Zumas supporters
and detractors.
According to the same paper, a member of the SACPs national
executive committee recently described the deepening fractures
as the worst in the partys history.
The conflict between the pro-Zuma and pro-Mbeki factions is
not based on issues of principle. Both groups are deeply concerned
about the rising popular opposition to the ANCs pro-business
policies, which over a year ago Bishop Desmond Tutu likened to
a powder keg. But they disagree over how to preserve
stability in the country and who can best protect the interests
of its tiny privileged minority.
Mbeki most directly articulates the interests of finance capital
and the transnational corporations. He has made clear his determination
to press ahead with the free-market policies demanded by the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund, of increased privatisation
and further attacks on workers wages and conditions.
He has announced that he will not stand for the presidency
again; to do so would necessitate an amendment to the constitution.
Instead, he insists that the next president of the country should
be a woman. This is an attempt to secure the presidency for his
acolyte, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka. As minerals minister, she was
responsible for the introduction of free-market measures that
cost of tens of thousands of jobs in the mining industry. She
was appointed as South Africas deputy president in Zumas
place after he was sacked by Mbeki.
Zuma is, by contrast, portrayed as a left-wingermainly
because of his association with the ANCs radical past and
his populist rhetoric about fulfilling the aims of the ANCs
Freedom Charter. But he has never opposed any of the governments
pro-market, privatisation policies that have devastated the lives
of millions. Mbeki chose Zuma as the countrys deputy president
in 1999when Mbeki replaced Nelson Mandela as president of
South Africaprecisely because he could use Zumas popular
credentials as a supposed left to head off opposition
to the governments neo-liberal agenda.
To the extent that differences exist between Mbekis and
Zumas supporters in the SACP and COSATU, they are of a tactical
characterhow to defend the interests of big capital, while
proceeding with the caution necessary to prevent an explosive
confrontation with the working class.
Additionally Zuma has attracted support from the party and
trade union bureaucracy because they fear that Mbeki will cut
them out of the riches to be made from exercising power and influence
peddling. The presidents claim to be rooting out corruption,
even in the highest echelons of the government, is an attempt
to prove to the Western powers and the major transnationals that
he is willing to act in their interests. Foreign investors view
corruption in the government and state apparatus as an unpardonable
effort by the local elite to siphon off too great a share of corporate
profits.
An attack on Zuma for corruption was politically expedient
for a number of reasons. It offered a means of proving to the
West that Mbeki was acceding to the demands being made on him;
made clear that the ANC would not make any concessions to workers
who supported Zuma because of his populist rhetoric; and eliminated
a powerful rival to Mbekis factiona rival whose power
base extended outside the ANC to embrace the SACP and much of
the trade union bureaucracy.
There is massive disaffection with the government, especially
in the townships where people suffer desperate poverty. South
African society is becoming increasingly polarised, with a small
clique of black businessmen and women, mostly made up of leading
members of the ANC, who are enriching themselves through the governments
policy of Black Economic Empowerment. In contrast, figures recently
published by the South African Institute of Race Relations demonstrated
that the living conditions for millions of South Africans have
actually worsened since the ending of Apartheid 12 years ago.
The proportion of black households with running water in their
homes fell by 10 percent between 1995 and 2004-05. And even where
water is available, its use is restricted or cut off because of
crippling water bills from the privatised companies.
The number of Africans living in absolute poverty rose from
16 million in 1996 to 22 million in 2004, an increase of 39 percent.
Over the same period, unemployment rose by 200 percent, from 1.3
million to 3.9 million.
This situation is compounded by the terrible reality that over
six million people are living with HIV, and less than 1 percent
of those who need it, have access to treatment under the governments
anti-retroviral plan.
Angry protests in the poverty-stricken districts of the major
cities have demanded decent housing with sanitation, and an end
to power cuts and water shutoffs. The governments response
has been to denounce the protests as the work of a secret
force fomenting trouble in an attempt to overthrow democracy.
The scale of the opposition to the ANC government was highlighted
during this years local government elections when ANC national
chairman, Mosiuoa Lekota, addressed a rally at the local stadium
in Khutsong, a small mining town of about 170,000 people. According
to press reports, less than 100 ANC supporters turned up, while
thousands protested outside. They were eventually dispersed by
the police firing rubber bullets and tear gas. Twenty-eight residents
were arrested.
The ANC was unable to campaign in the town, and posters were
torn down as soon as they were put up. Only one percent of residents
cast a ballot, in an area that had been an ANC stronghold. Councillors
have been forced to flee the area after the torching of several
houses.
It is this growing hatred for Mbeki and the government that
is bringing the ANC alliance near to breaking point. A leaked
SACP document has revealed that it is discussing standing as a
separate party in the next elections. Whether or not such a step
is taken, there is little doubt that both the SACP and COSATU
will support Zuma as the supposed peoples president
in order to head off any independent political development in
the working class that would threaten the interests of capitalism
in South Africa.
See Also:
South Africa: nearly
one million farmworkers evicted since 1993
[24 October 2005]
South Africa: factional
warfare within ANC coalition
[27 September 2005]
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