SA’s Ramaphosa cuts UK visit short to deal with protests


FE Team | Published: April 21, 2018 11:44:04 | Updated: April 23, 2018 16:37:35


South African President Cyril Ramaphosa speaks in parliament in Cape Town, South Africa, February 20, 2018. Reuters.

South Africa’s president has cut short a visit to Britain to return home and deal with violent protests in a provincial capital.

President Cyril Ramaphosa left the Commonwealth summit in London to respond to the turmoil in the North West capital of Mahikeng, where residents brought life to a standstill with protests over alleged corruption and calls for the premier to resign.

Ramaphosa was visiting the city on Friday in the most significant test of his public peacemaking skills since he took office in February, says an AP report.

A statement from the president’s office noted clashes with police and called for calm and engagement ‘rather than violence and anarchy.’ It also urged police to show restraint in the city of about 300,000.

The unrest continued Friday, with state broadcaster SABC showing police firing rubber bullets to disperse looters in the streets.

South Africa’s foreign minister, Lindiwe Sisulu, confirmed that Botswana had closed its border with the province because of the chaos, SABC reported.

South Africa’s next election is in 2019 and the ruling African National Congress party under Ramaphosa is eager to recover from its worst-ever election showing in 2016, in which the ANC lost control of major municipalities including commercial hub Johannesburg and the capital, Pretoria.

The party and its leadership also face internal divisions after the tumultuous resignation of former President Jacob Zuma in February after multiple scandals and allegations of graft.

Ramaphosa, Zuma’s former deputy, has repeatedly pledged to tackle the widespread corruption that had weakened investor confidence in one of Africa’s largest economies.

The North West premier, Supra Mahumapelo, is an ANC politician and has faced accusations of corruption from residents who say mismanagement has led to a decline in government services.

Similar protests have been common across South Africa, which the World Bank this year called, by any measure, ‘one of the most unequal countries in the world.’

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