South Africa’s last president under apartheid has
united with the two successors of Nelson Mandela to
launch a series of national dialogues on threats to
the
country’s democracy under current President Jacob
Zuma.
F.W. de Klerk—who was president from 1989 to 1994
and was succeeded by Mandela—told South African
broadcaster eNCA that he was “deeply disappointed” in
Zuma, who has been dogged by scandals in recent
months.
De Klerk was joined by Thabo Mbeki —who led South
Africa from 1999 and 2008—and Kgalema Motlanthe,
who took over after Mbeki’s resignation and was
president until he was succeeded by Zuma in 2009.
The trio united to form the National Foundations
Dialogue Initiative, which they described as a means of
engaging South African citizens in addressing the
country’s political malaise, South Africa’s Mail &
Guardian reported
President Zuma has faced fresh calls to resign following
his controversial sacking of the popular ex-finance
minister, Pravin Gordhan, in March.
The move
precipitated a credit downgrade for South Africa to junk
status and prompted criticism from within the
governing African National Congress (ANC).
Zuma’s
deputy Cyril Ramaphosa described the decision as
“totally unacceptable.”
The country’s highest court also ruled in March 2016
that Zuma had failed to uphold the constitution by
using state funds to build a swimming pool and cattle
ranch at his private residence in Nkandla, near South
Africa’s east coast.
Speaking at the launch in Braamfontein Friday, Zuma’s
immediate predecessor Motlanthe said that South
Africa risked a “democracy deficit” in which “the act of
violating the constitution, which amounts to the
ultimate profanity against our very mode of existence,
is reduced to banality.” Mbeki, Mandela’s successor as president, added that
anyone who undermined the constitution was
essentially subverting “the will of the people,” the BBC
reported.
The initiative is being backed by several foundations,
including those affiliated with de Klerk and Mbeki, as
well as the foundation led by prominent clergyman
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and his wife, Leah.
De Klerk’s involvement in the dialogue has provoked a
blunt response from some South Africans.
He served as
the final president under apartheid, a system of racial
segregation and white-minority rule that existed for
more than four decades in South Africa.
In cooperation with Mandela, de Klerk oversaw South
Africa’s transition to a non-racial democracy for which
the two men won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
Several members of the leftwing opposition party, the
Economic Freedom Fighters, interrupted the launch by
displaying placards reading: “F.W. de Klerk is a killer.”
De Klerk told eNCA that no atrocities had been
executed by his orders during apartheid and that he
had been cleared of wrongdoing by the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission, which was established in
1995.
Zuma is serving his second term as president and
cannot run for the third term in South Africa’s next
election in 2019.
He is expected to be replaced as ANC
leader at a party conference later in 2017, though the
party has closed ranks around the president and
rejected calls for him to step down immediately in the
wake of the recent cabinet reshuffle.
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