South
African President Jacob Zuma (C) has faced growing criticism over a series of
corruption scandals, worsening unemployment levels and slowing economic growth
©Mujahid Safodien (AFP)
|
South African President
Jacob Zuma prepared to deliver his annual state of the nation address on
Thursday after deploying more than 440 soldiers to prevent a repeat of violent
clashes outside parliament.
Constitutional
experts say there president's move is breach of the separation of powers. AFP
|
Zuma,
74, has faced growing criticism since his last address over a series of
damaging corruption scandals, worsening unemployment levels and slowing
economic growth.
In
December, he beat back an attempt by at least four ministers to oust him from
power, following local elections that delivered the ruling African National
Congress (ANC) party's worst-ever results.
The
president said the military deployment was to maintain "law and
order" outside parliament in Cape Town, but the move was condemned by the
main opposition Democratic Alliance party.
"The
DA will not stand by and allow for the 'people's parliament' to be turned into
a security-state show of force, meant to intimidate opposition both inside and
outside of the ANC," it said in a statement.
Zuma's
state of the nation address has been hit by regular protests in recent years.
In
2016, lawmakers from the leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) -- dressed in
their uniform of red workers' overalls and hard hats -- noisily interrupted his
speech before eventually being ordered out of the chamber.
Outside
on the streets of Cape Town, police fired stun grenades to disperse angry
protesters.
The
city, a stronghold of the DA party, has been under a tight security clampdown
this week.
The
2015 state of the nation address degenerated into chaos as protesting EFF
lawmakers were violently evicted by bouncers.
The
EFF, led by firebrand Julius Malema, has not said whether it will try to shout
Zuma down this year, but it described the use of soldiers as a
"declaration of war on citizens".
- Zuma heads to exit -
Zuma
is set to step down as leader of the ANC in December, before the general
election in 2019 that will mark the end of his two-term reign as national
president.
South
Africa, the continent's most industrialized economy, expanded by about 0.4
percent last year.
Inflation
hit 6.8 percent in December and unemployment has risen to a 13-year high of 27
percent.
"The
party is more unsure of itself, they appear overly paranoid," Daniel
Silke, an independent political analyst, told AFP.
"Deploying
the military shows the increasing frustration within ANC after the last two
years of disruptions."
Zuma,
a traditionalist leader who came to power in 2009, is widely seen as being at
loggerheads with Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, a reformist respected among
international investors.
South
Africa's highest court last year found the president guilty of violating the
constitution after he refused to repay taxpayers' money used to refurbish his
private rural house.
He
is also fighting a court order that could reinstate almost 800 corruption
charges against him over a multi-billion dollar arms deal in the 1990s.
A
separate probe by the country's top watchdog uncovered evidence of possible
criminal activity in his relationship with the Guptas, a business family
accused of wielding undue political influence.
Increasing
numbers of anti-apartheid veterans, ANC activists, trade unions, civil groups
and business leaders have called for Zuma to resign.
"You
must know that as a nation we no longer have confidence in your leadership,"
Sipho Mila Pityana, leader of the Save SA Action Group, said on the eve of
Zuma's speech, which is scheduled to start at 1700 GMT.
"You
are not trusted by the people. You are not trusted by civil society. And,
increasingly, you are not even trusted by your own party and its allies."
However Zuma retains strong loyalty among many rank-and-file ANC party members and its lawmakers.
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