President
Jacob Zuma may have gotten the support of leaders of the African National
Congress, but his people are demanding his resignation.
Thousands
marched in major South African cities today to protest against his
administration, demanding he leave after a cabinet reshuffle triggered the
latest crisis of his presidency.
South
Africa’s major workers’ union, COSATU similarly asked Zuma to resign on
Tuesday.
Zuma’s
sacking of Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan in the reshuffle last Thursday has
outraged allies and opponents alike, undermined his authority and caused rifts
in the ruling African National Congress (ANC), which has governed South Africa
since the end of white-minority rule in 1994.
Rating
agency S&P Global Ratings cited Gordhan’s dismissal as one reason for its
downgrade of South Africa to “junk” in an unscheduled review on Monday.
Syriana
Maesela, 65, a retiree was on her way by train to Pretoria to join the march
carrying a South African flag.
“I am
marching to get the ANC to take us seriously and respect our wishes by letting
the president go,” she said. “We are unhappy about his leadership because he
does not seem to care about the people.
“The irony
is I did the same thing in 1976 when I was a student. I also marched then,” she
said, referring protests against the apartheid regime.
Zuma
welcomed one of the marches, by the civil society group Save South Africa
(SaveSA) that was planned for outside the Union Buildings, the site of Zuma’s
offices in the capital, Pretoria, saying it was the group’s legal right to do
so.
SaveSA is
made up of civil society groups, business leaders and prominent individuals.
Zuma, 74,
has faced protests in the past. The ANC on Wednesday rejected calls for Zuma to
quit, and analysts doubted marches would shake the president.
And his
supporters also gathered to support him. About 300 camouflage-clad veterans of
the ANC’s now-disbanded Umkhonto we Sizwe military wing ringed the party’s
Luthuli House building in downtown Johannesburg, mounting mock parades and
singing in support of Zuma.
Some clad in
the yellow, green and gold colours of the ANC also danced, waving placards
emblazoned with the words: “I’m prepared to die for my ANC” and “Hands off our
President”.
The rand was
steady against the dollar in early trade on Friday. The currency has tumbled
more than 11 percent since March 27, when Zuma ordered Gordhan to return home
from overseas talks with investors, days before firing him.
“The rand
has stabilised,” Rand Merchant Bank currency strategists John Cairns said. “The
marches and the looming weekend will keep the market cautious.”
In the
country’s commercial hub, Johannesburg, several residents stood along the
roads, waving placards demanding that Zuma step down.
Mmusi
Maimane, leader of the main opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) party, was due
to lead a march in downtown Johannesburg, where thousands of marchers wearing
blue DA T-shirts gathered to start the march, with many bussed in from other
areas. Some held placards saying “Fire Zuma”.
“This
president is mishandling the presidency and he should leave office,” said
Graham Fish, 62.
A “holding
hands” picket was due to take place in Cape Town, where motorists hooted in
support of the march holding up South African flags. Aabout 2,000 people were
also marching in coastal city of Durban.
(NAN)
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