An opposition councillor is elected mayor of Pretoria after South Africa's ruling ANC party lost control of the capital for the first time since the end of apartheid © Rajesh Jantilal (AFP) |
South Africa's ruling ANC
lost control of the capital Pretoria for the first time since the end of
apartheid two decades ago, as an opposition councillor was elected mayor on
Friday.
AFP
report continues:
Solly
Msimanga, 36, of the liberal centre-right Democratic Alliance (DA), was elected
unopposed at a city council meeting following nationwide municipal ballots
earlier this month.
ANC
councillors, aggrieved at their loss of power, heckled Msimanga as he addressed
the council.
"The
people decided which way they want the city to go, and it was not the direction
that it has been taking in the last... years," Msimanga said in his
inaugural speech.
It
is the first time since the end of white-minority rule in 1994 that Pretoria is
not headed by a mayor from the African National Congress (ANC).
The
DA topped the August 3 municipal election in the capital, taking 93 of 214
council seats to the ANC's 89.
Nationally,
the party of Nelson Mandela suffered its worst result in 22 years in the
municipal vote, garnering less than 54 percent of ballots cast -- an eight
percentage point drop from the last local poll in 2011.
The
municipal elections were largely seen as a referendum on President Jacob Zuma,
whose rule of Africa's most advanced economy has been dogged by scandal.
Of
the country's six most populous cities, the ANC won an outright majority in
only one: Durban, Zuma's traditional stronghold.
-
'No more suffering' -
Msimanga
vowed to end the patronage that he said had left the capital in the red.
"This
city is technically bankrupt right now because of greediness and because of
people who decided to put themselves first," he said in a speech
repeatedly drowned out by chants and singing from ANC councillors.
"No
more will our people suffer under the hands of the ANC."
He
said the residents of the capital, also known as Tshwane, were "tired of
corruption, they are tired of nepotism, they are tired of cronyism... they are
tired of work only given to members of certain families and their
friends".
A
staunch Christian and father of two, Msimanga started off in the DA's marketing
department, working his way up over the years.
In
an interview with local Afrikaans-language daily Beeld, Msimanga said when he
never dreamed of becoming a mayor as he was growing up in Pretoria's
Atteridgeville township, one of the hotbeds of pre-election riots.
"The
dream of becoming mayor was as far-fetched as that of becoming an astronaut, so
I never even considered it," he said.
"Today
I'm proud and grateful for the opportunity to be the leader of this city."
Pretoria
was the second major city the ANC lost.
On
Thursday, the symbolically-named coastal town of Nelson Mandela Bay also went
to the DA when its candidate Athol Trollip was elected mayor.
It
remains unclear which way the mayoral vote will swing in the economic hub of
Johannesburg, where the ANC won most councillor seats, but fell short of an
outright majority.
The DA now runs three major cities, including tourism hub and legislative capital Cape Town.
No comments:
Post a Comment