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楼主 |
发表于 2008-9-23 16:46:43
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Mr Mbeki was due to address the country on Sunday September 21st. Several ministers loyal to Mr Mbeki may choose to resign, but Trevor Manuel, the well-respected finance minister, has already said that he would stay. Parliament would elect Mr Mbeki’s successor and Kgalema Motlanthe, an ally of Mr Zuma and the deputy leader of the party, is now touted as the likely caretaker. Mr Zuma, who has kept a low profile in the past few days, will wait until the election next year to seek his own rise to the top job. None in the ruling party seems keen on an early general election, given the current infighting. It is certain to win, but the opposition, which has won back the city of Cape Town, could wrest at least the Western Cape province from the ruling party. More voters, disheartened by the ANC’s infighting and Mr Mbeki’s ousting, may also decide to stay at home on election day.
The local press is awash with rumours that supporters of Mr Mbeki, led by the defence minister, Mosiuoa Lekota, may leave to form a new party to contest next year’s election. If Mr Mbeki’s departure becomes an all-out purge of those close to him, this may happen. But the ANC’s leaders are probably strong enough to resist firebrands such as Julius Malema, the leader of the party’s Youth League and a strident supporter of Mr Zuma, and so should be able to keep the party together for now.
What will happen to the corruption and fraud charges against Mr Zuma is unclear. The new ANC leadership wants the whole thing dropped, arguing he has been treated unfairly. Although the NPA has said that it intends to appeal the court ruling which declared the charges invalid on a technicality, papers have not been filed yet. The next few months will indicate whether the ruling party’s new leaders are able to resist the temptation of doing exactly what they accuse Mr Mbeki of: meddling with the prosecution for political ends. |
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