Anti-apartheid
activist jailed with Mandela urges Zuma to resign
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[April 02, 2016]
By Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - An anti-apartheid
activist jailed alongside Nelson Mandela called on Jacob Zuma to step
down, adding pressure on South Africa's president to quit after a court
ruled he acted dishonestly over improper state spending at his private
home.
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Echoing similar calls from opposition parties, Ahmed Kathrada said
in a letter published on Saturday that Zuma's resignation would give
the country's government the chance to recover from "a crisis of
confidence".
"In the face of such persistently widespread criticism, condemnation
and demand, is it asking too much to express the hope that you will
choose the correct way that is gaining momentum, to consider
stepping down?" Kathrada asked in the letter, dated March 31.
Mandela and Kathrada were among eight African National Congress
(ANC) activists sentenced to life imprisonment after being convicted
of trying to overthrow the apartheid government during the 1963-1964
Rivonia Trial.
South Africa's top court on Thursday held that Zuma had failed to
uphold the constitution by ignoring instructions to pay back some of
the $16 million in state funds spent on renovations at his sprawling
residence at Nkandla.
In a televised address to the nation on Friday evening, 73-year-old
Zuma apologised and said he would pay back some of the money, as
ordered, and that he never knowingly or deliberately set out to
violate the constitution.
He made no reference to calls for him to resign, led domestically by
Democratic Alliance leader Mmusi Maimane and the Economic Freedom
Fighters party led by Julius Malema.
The opposition also launched impeachment proceedings against Zuma
but these are unlikely to be successful because of the ANC's strong
majority in parliament.
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The ANC's top leadership said it was united behind its leader,
though the 86-year-old Kathrada's intervention may carry weight
within the party, which has governed the country since apartheid
ended in 1994.
The calls for Zuma to quit dominated local newspaper headlines and
got high-profile play abroad.
"It is a shame that the ANC is allowing its moral and political
authority to be so grievously eroded by Zuma, instead of bringing
his corrupt presidency to an end," The New York Times wrote in an
editorial on Friday.
The scandal is arguably the biggest yet to hit Zuma, who has fended
off accusations of corruption, influence peddling and rape since
before he took office in 2009.
Speaking on Talk Radio 702, Kathrada Foundation Director Neeshan
Balton confirmed publication of the letter, which was ran on media
websites www.timeslive.co.za and www.enca.com.
(editing by John Stonestreet)
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