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Culture > Zimbabwe > Mbeki to step d...
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Mbeki to step down

by Bill <williamgates@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sep 20, 2008 at 06:38 PM

BBC NEWS

2008/09/20 

SA's Mbeki says he will step down 

South African President Thabo Mbeki will accept a call to resign by the 
governing African National Congress (ANC), his spokesman has said. 

Mukoni Rat****anga said Mr Mbeki would leave his post once "all 
constitutional requirements have been met". 

It comes days after a High Court judge suggested that Mr Mbeki may have 
interfered in a corruption case against his rival, ANC leader Jacob 
Zuma. 

Mr Zuma was expected to succeed Mr Mbeki in scheduled elections next 
year. 

Mr Mbeki has called for his cabinet to meet on Sunday. 

Parliament is expected to meet in the coming days to formalise the 
resignation, and is likely to appoint the parliamentary speaker as 
interim leader. 

The decision to call for Mr Mbeki's early resignation was taken at a 
meeting of the ANC's National Executive Committee (NEC). 

The ANC's Secretary General Gwede Mantashe said the move had followed 
"a long and difficult discussion". 

He said Mr Mbeki, who has ruled for more than a decade, "did not 
display shock" at the decision and had agreed to participate "in the 
process and the formalities". 

The decision had been taken for "stability and for a peaceful and 
prosperous South Africa", Mr Mantashe told a news conference. 

The ANC secretary general said this was not punishment for Thabo Mbeki, 
adding that the president would be given the chance to continue his 
role as mediator in Zimbabwe. 

At the same time, ANC cabinet members are being urged to remain in 
government to ensure continued stability. 

Political interference 

The BBC's Peter Biles in Pretoria says this dramatic decision will 
fundamentally change South Africa's political landscape. 

Mr Mbeki fired Jacob Zuma as deputy president in 2005 after his 
financial adviser was found guilty of soliciting a bribe on his behalf. 

But Mr Zuma returned to the political stage to topple his rival as ANC 
leader in bitterly contested elections last year. 

Earlier this month a High Court judge dismissed corruption and other 
charges against Mr Zuma, saying there was evidence of political 
interference in the investigation. 

In his ruling the judge said it appeared that Mr Mbeki had colluded 
with prosecutors against Jacob Zuma as part of the "titanic power 
struggle" within the ANC. 

The accusation was strongly denied by Mr Mbeki. 

Weakened position 

Mr Mbeki, who has devoted his life to the ANC, succeeded Nelson Mandela 
as the party's president in 1997. 

He became leader of South Africa in 1999 and won a second term in 2004. 

Perhaps his biggest policy success has been South Africa's rapid 
economic growth since the end of apartheid and the rise of a black 
middle class - but to the anger of many, wealth is more unevenly 
distributed than ever before. 

He has failed to convince the trade unions and the poorest South 
Africans that the government has acted in their interest - providing 
space for Mr Zuma to mobilise a powerful constituency. 

Domestically, his government's handling of the HIV/Aids crisis and 
failure to stem violent crime in the country has weakened his hand.
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Mbeki to step down
Bill <williamgates@[EM  2008-09-20 18:38:16 

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