Business Report.jpg

 

 

Ramaphosa the man to succeed Zuma?

 

 

M Cohen and A Mbatha, Bloomberg, Business Report, Cape Town, 9 December 2015

 

Cyril Ramaphosa is the only serving politician in South Africa who's led
both a labour union and a business empire.

 

Now chances are rising that he'll lead the country.

 

The country's biggest labour group last month cautiously backed Ramaphosa to
head the ruling African National Congress in two years - a post that would
make him a shoo-in to succeed President Jacob Zuma in 2019. That would crown
a comeback from political obscurity after Thabo Mbeki outmanoeuvred him to
become deputy president in 1994 and for the top job when Nelson Mandela
stepped down in 1999. He was only named deputy president last year.

 

Mandela, Ramaphosa, Zuma at CODESA.jpg

Mandela, Zuma, Ramaphosa, Mbeki and others at CODESA talks

 

If Ramaphosa, 63, does triumph he'd face an economy that's gone adrift under
Zuma. The rand has hit record lows, the nation's credit rating is on the
brink of being downgraded to junk and violent protests are the order of the
day. Public disgruntlement is growing about 25.5 percent unemployment and a
lack of housing and decent education.

 

"He would be a candidate with some credentials and a track record," Viktor
Szabo, a fund manager who oversees $12 billion of emerging-market debt at
Aberdeen Asset Management and has an underweight stance on South African
bonds, said from London. "The problem we have with South Africa is the
ongoing, slow but steady deterioration of the fundamentals."

 

Ramaphosa still has to persuade the ruling party, some of whose leaders are
suspicious of his wealth and pro-business leanings, that he's the right man
for the job.

 

In 2012, he made a failed R19.5 million ($1.34 million) bid for a prize
buffalo cow and calf at a game auction, a move opposition parties said was
scandalous given that 22 percent of the population goes hungry.

 

Ramaphosa also was accused by the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters of
spurring police to shoot 34 miners at Lonmin's Marikana platinum mines in
2012 by urging the government to end an illegal strike. Ramaphosa, who was a
non-executive director of Lonmin at the time of the killings, denied
wrongdoing and a commission of inquiry absolved him of all responsibility,
but more than 300 victims are suing him for damages.

 

Biggest companies

 

Before politics and business, Ramaphosa trained as a lawyer. He co-founded
the National Union of Mineworkers and built it into country's largest labour
union, in 1987 leading South Africa's biggest-ever gold strike. He headed
the ANC team that negotiated an end to apartheid and ran a panel that wrote
the first democratic constitution. Next was the accumulation of a fortune of
at least R2.7 billion and time as chairman of some of the nation's biggest
companies. He re-entered full-time politics in December 2012 when he was
elected the ANC's deputy leader.

 

As deputy president, Ramaphosa has overseen a team that's helped tackle
chronic power shortages and halt managed blackouts, and has used his
negotiating skills to try to quell political instability in South Sudan and
neighbouring Lesotho.

 

Delegates who attended a Communist Party congress near Johannesburg in July
jumped to their feet and chanted when Ramaphosa, the second-richest black
South African, arrived to address them. Dressed in a yellow ANC T-shirt and
black blazer, Ramaphosa danced on stage before defending widely opposed
tolls on freeways in Gauteng and elaborating on government plans to
redistribute wealth and ignite growth.

 

Union roots

 

"He's a good leader and has what it takes to do the job," said Thabang
Masinga, 35, a lawyer who works for Barclays in Johannesburg, as he exited
the Columbine Square mall after doing his grocery shopping. Ramaphosa's
fortune "has not made people forget his roots as a unionist".

 

Unions have played a key role in South African politics, and none more than
the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), the federation that
tentatively backed Ramaphosa. It's been a member of South Africa's ruling
alliance since the ANC took power under Mandela in the first multi-racial
election in 1994. The federation showed its political muscle in 2007, when
it helped Zuma wrest control of the party from Mbeki.

 

While most COSATU unions back Ramaphosa, a decision on whether to formally
endorse him is only likely to be taken next year, according to Sizwe Pamla,
the federation's spokesman.

 

Main rival

 

Ramaphosa's main rival for the top ANC post is Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, 66,
the head of the African Union commission, who has the backing of the party's
women's league, youth league and a handful of provincial governors. The
president's ex-wife, she previously served as minister of health, foreign
affairs and home affairs.

 

In keeping with party tradition, Ramaphosa has been coy about his
presidential ambitions, joking that he wants to become a cleaner in
Parliament. Ronnie Mamoepa, Ramaphosa's spokesman, referred queries to the
ANC. Gwede Mantashe, the party's secretary-general, said it is too early to
be discussing succession.

 

What's clear is that Ramaphosa doesn't need the president's R2.75 million
annual salary (he currently earns R2.6 million as deputy). He keeps a cattle
ranch in Mpumalanga and is building a hillside mansion overlooking the sea
in Cape Town's exclusive Fresnaye suburb.

 

In May, his family trust sold its 29.6 percent stake in Shanduka Group, the
investment company he founded in 2001 - keeping its stake in McDonald's
South Africa. The trust's overall stake in Shanduka was worth R2.6 billion
as of January 2014. Ramaphosa also disclosed to Parliament that he also owns
30 townhouses, two apartments and stakes in seven other companies with a
nominal value of R76.6 million.

 

The contest is still in its early stages and remains wide open, according to
Susan Booysen, a politics professor at the University of the Witwatersrand
and author of two books on the ANC.

 

"The COSATU endorsement is very important," she said. "This is confirmation
that Cyril is in the race."

 

.    With assistance from Franz Wild, Paul Vecchiatto and Rene Vollgraaff

 

 

From:
<http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/ramaphosa-the-man-to-succeed-zuma-1.1957
665#.Vmgdhrh9600>
http://www.iol.co.za/business/news/ramaphosa-the-man-to-succeed-zuma-1.19576
65#.Vmgdhrh9600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to