SACP wants Mbeki to go?
2008-05-10 16:03
Johannesburg - The SACP, an ally of the ANC, called at a weekend summit for
President Thabo Mbeki to be sacked, newspapers said on Saturday,
but the ANC said the issue was not even on the agenda.
The summit between the ANC, the SACP and Cosatu aims at healing rifts that have emerged
between the groups under Mbeki, who was ousted as party leader
by rival Jacob Zuma late last year.
Zuma, who became the frontrunner to succeed Mbeki after
defeating him as ANC leader, has vowed to work more closely with
Cosatu and the small but influential SACP.
The three are in a formal coalition that has governed since
the end of apartheid in 1994.
The Weekender newspaper quoted an unnamed SACP central
committee member as saying at the start of the summit that: "The
central committee expressed a strong sentiment that there is a
leadership crisis and that he (Mbeki) should be recalled because
we don't have confidence in his ability."
The Saturday Star newspaper said SACP and Cosatu agreed the
Mbeki presidency was in crisis, pointing to factors including
months of power shortages that have hit the economy and a
shake-up at South Africa's public broadcaster that has
highlighted divisions between the ANC's two centres of power.
But ANC spokesperson Tiyani Rikhotso dismissed any suggestion
that Mbeki's political future was being discussed at the summit.
"The president of the ANC, Jacob Zuma, the general secretary
of the SACP, Blade Nzimade, the general secretary of Cosatu,
Zwelinzima Vavi, all of them gave their political input in
opening the alliance summit," Rikhotso told Reuters.
"At no point in their input did I hear any of them suggest
that the president of the republic should be removed from
office. So I don't know where that is coming from."
Not on the agenda
Asked whether the alliance conference would discuss removing
Mbeki from office, he said: "That item is not on the agenda. It
is not an issue that is being discussed by the summit."
Labour leaders have accused Mbeki and his senior officials
of acting as little more than business agents for the country's
corporations and its predominantly white elite at the expense of
workers and the poor.
Investors are spooked by the prospect the ANC could heed the
left's calls for a shift away from Mbeki's business-friendly
policies. Business has credited Mbeki and Finance Minister
Trevor Manuel for laying the groundwork for an economic boom
which has spawned rising investment, higher consumer spending
and the emergence of a black middle class.
- Reuters