Zuma's MK party seeks to block South African parliament citing
vote-rigging
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[June 11, 2024]
By Tannur Anders
JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -Former South African president Jacob Zuma's
uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party has applied to the country's top court to
block the newly elected parliament from sitting this week on the grounds
that the May 29 vote was marred by fraud, it said on Tuesday.
The National Assembly is due to convene on Friday for lawmakers to swear
the oath of office and elect their speaker, deputy speaker and the
country's president.
The challenge from MK comes at a time when South Africa is facing a
level of political uncertainty unseen in 30 years of democracy, with no
clarity as to who will govern the country when the electoral dust
settles.
The African National Congress (ANC), which has been in power since the
end of apartheid in 1994, lost its majority but remains the biggest
party, and is now negotiating with a range of other parties with
diametrically opposed policy aspirations.
MK came a surprisingly strong third, winning 14.6% of the vote which
translates into 58 seats in the 400-seat chamber, but despite its
success it has alleged vote-rigging took place and threatened to boycott
the new parliament.
"The 2024 elections were anything but free and fair," said Sihle Ngubane,
MK's secretary-general, in the party's application to the Constitutional
Court, which it circulated to media on Tuesday via a WhatsApp group.
The Independent Electoral Commission and other parties said the election
was free and fair, and South Africa does not have a history of
significant vote fraud.
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South Africa's former President Jacob Zuma arrives with his daughter
and member of uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Duduzile Zuma at the National
Results Operation Centre of the IEC, which serves as an operational
hub where results of the national election are displayed, in Midrand,
South Africa, June 1, 2024. REUTERS/Alet Pretorius/ File Photo
A new entrant in South African politics, MK gained momentum after
Zuma announced in December he would be backing the party and soon
became its leader.
The party advocates rewriting the constitution, seizing land from
white farmers and nationalizing all natural resources including
mines.
A longtime pillar of the ANC, Zuma fell out with the party after he
was forced to quit as president in 2018 over a string of corruption
scandals. He was jailed in 2021 for refusing to give evidence at a
public inquiry that found there had been widespread public sector
corruption during his administration.
Zuma retains a vast and loyal following, especially in his populous
home province of KwaZulu-Natal, where MK won 45.9% of the vote to a
humiliating 17.6% for the ANC.
MK's name, which means "Spear of the Nation" in Zulu, was also the
name of the ANC's armed wing from the apartheid era, but an attempt
by the ANC before the election to prevent its rival from using that
name and branding was unsuccessful.
(Reporting by Tannur Anders and Alexander WinningWriting by Estelle
Shirbon; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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