ZUMA QUITS, ENDING SCANDAL-PLAGUED TERM AS SOUTH AFRICAN PRESIDENT
Jacob Zuma resigned as
President of South Africa on Wednesday, reluctantly heeding orders by the
ruling African National Congress (ANC) to bring an end to his nine
scandal-plagued years in power.
In a 30-minute
farewell address to the nation, 75-year-old Zuma said he disagreed with the way
the ANC had shoved him toward an early exit after the election of Cyril
Ramaphosa as party president in December, but would accept its orders.
“I have therefore
come to the decision to resign as president of the republic with immediate
effect,” Zuma said.
“Even though I disagree
with the decision of the leadership of my organization, I have always been a
disciplined member of the ANC,” he said.
The ruling party had
said it would vote him out on Thursday.
“No life should be
lost in my name. And also the ANC should not be divided in my name,” Zuma said.
His resignation came
just hours after police raided the luxury home of the Gupta family, Indian-born
billionaire allies of the president who have been at the center of corruption
allegations against Zuma and his circle for years. Zuma and the Guptas have
always denied wrongdoing.
The ANC, which
replaced Zuma as party leader in December with Deputy President Cyril
Ramaphosa, ordered him to step down as president on Tuesday. When he failed to
resign on Wednesday, it announced that it would back an opposition motion in
parliament to force him out.
His resignation ends
the career of the former anti-apartheid resistance fighter, who has four wives,
a sharp tongue and a decades-long history of entanglement in scandals that
polarized Nelson Mandela’s “Rainbow Nation”.
The rand currency,
which has gained ground whenever Zuma has hit political turbulence, soared more
than one percent to a 2-1/2 year high of 11.66 against the dollar during the
day, as pressure piled on Zuma to resign.
His party hailed his
decision to go.
“This decision
provides certainty to the people of South Africa at a time when economic and
social challenges to the country require an urgent and resolute response,” said
the ANC’s deputy secretary general, Jessie Duarte.
NEW PRESIDENT
ANC chief whip Jackson
Mthembu said before Zuma announced his resignation that Ramaphosa could be
sworn in as new head of state as early as Friday. Ramaphosa, 65, was the ANC’s
chief negotiator with South Africa’s apartheid rulers during the talks that led
to the end of white rule, and is seen as a conciliatory figure who could help
heal divisions that widened under Zuma.
Hours before Zuma’s
resignation, South Africa was captivated by news of the early morning raid on
the compound of his allies the Guptas, who were accused two years ago in a 350
page report by a corruption watchdog of using their influence to gain control
of state companies and contracts.
The SABC, South
Africa’s state broadcaster, said a Gupta family member was among those
detained. A senior judicial source said police expected to arrest up to seven
more people and that Gupta family members would be among them.
“You can’t bring a matter of this nature to
court and not charge the people who have benefited the most,” the source, who
has knowledge of the police’s moves, told Reuters.
A Gupta family
lawyer told Reuters none of the Gupta brothers were among those held.
The police said the
raid was in connection with a state-funded dairy farm, which prosecutors last
month called a “scheme designed to defraud and steal”.
Prosecutors have
seized 220 million rand ($19 million) in state funds allocated to the project
and froze bank accounts of one of the Gupta brothers, Atul Gupta. The Guptas’
lawyer declined to comment on the case.
Shortly after dawn,
a dozen Hawks police officers sealed off a street leading to the Gupta mansion
in Johannesburg’s upscale Saxonwold suburb. One blocked access to Reuters,
saying: “This is a crime scene.”
Minutes later, an
unmarked police van left the compound as residents applauded police officers
and hurled abuse at security guards for the Guptas.
“Finally something
is being done about it. These guys must get out of our country. They must leave
us alone. They have done enough damage,” said Tessa Turvey, head of the local
residents’ association, standing outside the compound’s iron gates.
Police also raided
the Guptas’ Oakbay holding company in Johannesburg’s Sandton financial
district, according to a security guard outside the building.
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