/ 24 September 2008

Zuma sees ‘nothing extraordinary’ in resignations

The public should not panic about Cabinet resignations, African National Congress president Jacob Zuma said in Mpumalanga on Tuesday.

”The resignations do not pose a crisis and there is no need to panic,” said Zuma at a memorial lecture for Gert Sibande in Secunda, Mpumalanga.

”The situation will be managed carefully to avoid any disruption of services.”

Zuma was speaking after a third of the Cabinet, including Finance Minister Trevor Manuel, resigned en masse on Tuesday in the wake of the axing of President Thabo Mbeki.

But as markets trembled, Manuel announced he was willing to accept reappointment, and the party confirmed that he would get the job back.

Zuma said current political changes were ”nothing extraordinary”.

”It is part of the turbulence that occurs in politics at some point or other and which just needs careful and skillful management.

”It is a passing phase.”

Zuma said the situation would soon return to normal ”as we know exactly what we should do and are doing it with speed, precision and sensitivity”.

”We urge our citizens not to panic and to allow the ANC to manage the situation.”

Zuma said that the party had called upon ministers and deputy ministers to stay on.

”We respect the decision of those who have resigned. The new president will be able to form a capable new government soon that will serve the nation and take forward the struggle to build a better life for all South Africans.”

Zuma said public servants in departments whose ministers had resigned were urged to focus on the work at hand.

”The political situation will be resolved soon and should not affect service delivery at all.”

Zuma said the national executive committee’s decision to recall Mbeki was painful but necessary for the country and party to move forward.

He said ANC deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe, if given the task, would serve the country well as president until the next elections.

Zuma said he was pleased with the calm and mature way South Africans had handled Mbeki’s recall.

No crisis
”There is no crisis,” ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe told a news conference in Johannesburg.

The resignations, of Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, ten ministers and four deputies, follow the ANC’s weekend decision to recall Mbeki.

”All the ministers have expressed their availability to assist the incoming administration in the hand-over process and any other assistance that might be sought from them,” the statement said.

”The resignations will be effective from the day that the president’s resignation takes effect [Thursday].”

Reflecting apprehension over Manuel, the rand dropped sharply in the immediate wake of the announcement, slipping from R7,98 to the US dollar to R8,16.

However when Manuel’s spokesperson indicated an hour later that he and his deputy, Jabu Moleketi — who also resigned — were available to serve in a new administration, the currency bounced back, and by 2.30pm was trading at R8,14 to the dollar.

”We are asking people not to panic about his announcement,” his spokesperson Thoraya Pandy said.

Economist Mike Schussler was not impressed.

”He resigns and then in the next hour he says he may be prepared to stay on. ”He should have announced his situation upfront — now people in the market are really confused,” he said.

Manuel said it was common practice in other democratic countries for Cabinet ministers to resign if the head of state stepped down.

This was to allow the incoming president to appoint his own Cabinet.

However he said he had assured Zuma and Motlanthe — tipped to be the next president — that he was prepared to serve in the new administration.

Split in the party
The ANC NEC decided on Saturday to remove Mbeki from office after a high court ruling that he may have been involved in a political plot against Zuma.

The demise of Mbeki was the climax of a long and bitter battle with Zuma, which has seriously split the formerly monolithic party.

Parliament is expected to appoint Motlanthe as interim president on Thursday until a general election next year, which Zuma is widely expected to win.

Mbeki’s resignation followed accusations — which he denies — of meddling in a long-running graft case against his rival.

Reserve Bank Governor Tito Mboweni will stay on, his spokesperson said.

Zuma has tried to reassure foreign investors he would not bow to pressure from leftist union allies to shift away from business-friendly policies.

He has made clear his backing for Motlanthe and pledged on Monday that the party would ensure a smooth transition and unchanged economic policy. – Sapa, Reuters