Jacob Zuma’s new ANC leadership has taken its most decisive move to end uncertainty about economic policy by flatly rejecting nationalisation.
Gwede Mantashe embraces what he criticises and as a result the ANC as a whole is at war with itself, writes Niren Tolsi.
Niren Tolsi goes deep into the web to find the underground world that lives on the Hidden Wiki.
The ANC has rejected mine nationalisation as an economic policy at the ruling party’s elective conference in Mangaung, Free State.
There will be a court challenge to the legality of the ANC’s national conference at Mangaung, two people involved in the process have told the M&G.
Tokyo Sexwale says that by standing for ANC deputy president despite slim chances, he was honouring democracy within the ruling party.
The ANC’s number of members has grown significantly since the party’s Polokwane elective conference in 2007 until now, according to provincial audits.
The Free State ANC’s PEC has been prohibited by the national executive committee from voting at the national electoral conference in Mangaung.
The Constitutional Court has declared the ANC’s Free State PEC "and its decisions and resolutions [made there] unlawful and invalid".
But overcrowded prisons such as Pollsmoor may not be able to address their healthcare deficits. Niren Tolsi reports.