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 South Africa
Motlanthe Serves as "Interim" President; Opposition to the ANC
Grows
Under pressure from leaders the African National Congress (ANC), Mbeki
announced he would step down just days after Zuma was cleared. While party
leader's cited Mbeki's alleged interference in the corruption case against
Zuma, Mbeki's resignation culminated several years of bitter infighting
between Zuma and Mbeki, which led to discord in the ANC. On Sep. 25,
Parliament elected Kgalema Motlanthe, a labor leader who was imprisoned
during apartheid, as president. Zuma must be a member of Parliament before
he can be elected president. Parliamentary elections are expected in early
2009.
On his first day as president, Motlanthe acted to move beyond Mbeki's
resistance to using modern and effective methods, such as antirretroviral
medicines, to tackle its AIDS crisis by replacing South Africa's health
minister, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, who has suggested that garlic, lemon
juice, and beetroot could cure AIDS, with Barbara Hogan. "The era of
denialism is over," she said. More than 5.7 million South Africans are
HIV-positive, the highest number of any country in the world.
In November, about 6,400 dissident members of the ANC held a convention
in Johannesburg and decided to form a new party that will challenge the
leadership of the ANC. The delegates, many of whom supported former
president Mbeki, expressed dissatisfaction with the leadership of the
party, calling it corrupt, authoritarian, and "rotting." In December, the
new party, the Congress of the People (COPE), selected former defense
minister Mosiuoa Lekota as its president.
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