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South African Parliament to Debate Motion to Impeach Jacob Zuma

The ANC majority in parliament will almost certainly give Zuma political cover against the attempt to impeach him.

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South Africa’s parliament, on Tuesday, will debate a motion to impeach President Jacob Zuma, National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete said, after a top court ruled that the president had violated the constitution.

South Africa’s constitutional court ruled on Thursday that Zuma had failed to uphold the constitution by ignoring orders from the public protector that he repay some of the $16 million in state funds spent to renovate his private residence at Nkandla.

Since Thursday’s ruling, the opposition party leaders, ordinary South Africans and even Ahmed Kathrda, an anti-apartheid activist jailed alongside Nelson Mandela have called on Zuma to step down.

South African freedom fighter and Nelson Mandela’s close aide Ahmed Kathrada, who is of Indian origin, has called on the country’s embattled President Jacob Zuma to “submit to the will of the people” and resign.

Today, I appeal to our President to submit to the will of the people and resign. I believe that is what would help the country to find its way out of a path that it never imagined it would be on, but one that it must move out of soon.
Ahmed Kathrada, Freedom Fighter, Anti-Apartheid Activist

The Africa National Congress majority in parliament will almost certainly give Zuma political cover against the attempt to impeach him. But the judicial rebuke may embolden anti-Zuma factions within the ruling party to mount a challenge.

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The unanimous ruling by the 11-judge constitutional court also criticised the parliament for passing a resolution that purported to nullify Public Protector Thuli Madonsela’s findings on the state spending on Zuma’s private residence.

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.

On Friday, the 73-year-old president gave a televised address to the nation in which he apologised and said he would pay back some of the money, as ordered. He said that he never knowingly or deliberately set out to violate the constitution .

The president travelled to his home province of Kwazulu-Natal on Sunday to launch a relief programme as part of government efforts to support areas affected by South Africa’s worst drought in more than a century.

He told a cheering crowd that he was still South Africa’s leader and joked about how youthful he was, but made no specific mention of the Nkandla matter, the pending impeachment motion or calls for him to step down as he addressed the gathering in Zulu, his native language.

(With inputs from wires)

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