Challenge the president? Don't even think about it
Thabo Mbeki is still well-positioned to secure a second term in office, but has been damaged by the allegations of a conspiracy to harm him. Patrick Laurence reports.
SOUTH AFRICANS SHOULD be grateful to
safety and security minister Steve Tshwete. Since he appeared on SABC1
on April 24 and identified three senior ANC members as the alleged
conspirators in a plot against President Thabo Mbeki, the party's
entrails have been exposed to public scrutiny. Tshwete's decision to
name immediate past ANC secretary-general Cyril Ramaphosa, former
Gauteng premier Tokyo Sexwale, and former Mpumalanga premier Mathews
Phosa as the alleged leaders of the "conspiracy" is both a sign of
divisive tensions within the ANC-alliance and a catalyst for further
bitter acrimony. As Phosa remarked, "the mudslinging has only just
started."
The party, in its on-line journal ANC Today, justified the police
investigation as necessary to prevent "physical harm" to Mbeki. This
implies that the trio were conspiring to topple Mbeki in a coup rather
than merely seeking to oppose him when he stands for re-election as ANC
president at the party's national conference in December next
year.
National police commissioner Jackie Selebi told Beeld (April 25) that
the police are in possession of information that, according to "a
senior ANC member", indicates next year's national conference could be
a bloodbath. "It is our duty to investigate such allegations," he said.
"The word 'bloodbath' and the fact that the head of state's life is
allegedly threatened is enough reason."
At the same time, however, the party blamed the media for spreading
reports of "secretive plans" to contest senior positions in the ANC and
of counter-manoeuvres to marginalise the contenders, "with little
tangible evidence" of these developments. ANC agitprop thus suggests
that the threat to harm Mbeki physically must be taken seriously, while
the reports of legitimate challenges to his leadership can be dismissed
as media-inspired fiction.
The ANC's alliance partners, the Congress of South African Trade
Unions (Cosatu) and the South African Communist Party (SACP), have been
vocal in their criticism. "It is highly irresponsible to announce the
names of people subject to investigations, long before any final
conclusions have been reached," notes Cosatu. Tshwete's naming of the
alleged plot leaders "violates the due process of law", puts the trio
at risk, aids the spread of rumours and fear and raises the risk of the
police interference with "legitimate political contestation", Cosatu
adds. Secretary general Zwelinzima Vavi demanded that Tshwete
apologise, something he has refused to do. He also warned that the
organisation would not be blackmailed into silence.
The SACP spoke out against conflation of the security concerns of the
state with the "normal, legitimate democratic processes of our
movement". However SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande called on
Tshwete to widen his probe to include sources of the allegations within
the ANC and intelligence agent Bheki Jacobs. One of Jacobs' reports has
alleged that sub-groups within the SACP were building an anti-Mbeki
front. "He has been specialising in implanting lies and general
tensions in the movement," said Nzimande.
A slew of political analysts see the police investigation as an
attempt to taint legitimate internal party opposition to the ANC's
current leader with the whiff of treason. An editorial in the Financial
Times on the eve of Nelson Mandela's appearance at the Trafalgar Square
pop concert that launched Celebrate South Africa month in Britain said
the "extraordinary" allegations "may well prove to be a foolish own
goal".
In the face of critical comment in foreign media Mandela used the
concert platform to limit the damage. He spoke appreciatively about
Mbeki, saying he would gladly support him for a second term, but he
referred to the three accused as "comrades" - an accolade in itself.
"Until there is evidence to substantiate the allegations, I will always
regard them in high esteem," he said. Significantly, he added: "Cyril
Ramaphosa led our negotiating team. It is he who is really responsible
for the settlement that led to a democratic South Africa."
Examination of the basis for the police investigation strengthens
suspicions that the conspiracy is more likely to be fictional than the
"secretive reports" of prospective challenges to Mbeki's plans to stand
for re-election as ANC leader next year and as president after the 2004
general election. During his appearance before the parliamentary
security committee meeting on May 3, Tshwete stated that the
investigation had been sparked by an intelligence report; anonymous
letters and phone calls; and an affidavit from James Nkambule, former
ANC Youth League leader in Mpumalanga.
According to National Intelligence Agency spokesman Helmut Schlenter,
"the official intelligence agencies are not involved in the inquiry,"
which suggests that the intelligence report is the work of an internal
ANC unit. Moreover, James Nkambule, author of a report on machinations
within the ANC in Mpumalanga and of alleged intrigue against Mbeki,
hardly qualifies as a reliable witness: he faces 77 charges of theft
and fraud relating to alleged embezzlement from state coffers. Many of
his assets have already been seized by the Asset Forfeiture Unit, a
step which the unit only takes when it is convinced that there are
strong reasons for suspecting that the assets at issue have been
acquired unlawfully. His alleged partner in crime is Alan Gray, the
former chief of the Mpumalanga Parks Board and another controversial
figure in the province.
Nkambule's report has undergone several revisions since it was first
sent to the ANC head office in November 1998, most recently with its
submission as a sworn affidavit to the police in February and again in
late April - reportedly on the same day as Tshwete's April 24
television broadcast.
His initial report led to an internal ANC inquiry, culminating in the
ousting of Phosa as Mpumalanga premier and his replacement by Mbeki
nominee Ndaweni Mahlangu. It centres on the sale of an arms shipment
that had arrived for the ANC in Maputo in 1992 but which was never
needed. Nkambule alleges that former defence minister Joe Modise failed
to inform ANC head office of the sale or to deposit the proceeds with
the ANC as he had promised Umkhonto leader Chris Hani he would. An
angry Hani confronted Modise in March 1993 and threatened to report the
sale directly to ANC headquarters himself. "Exactly two weeks after
that meeting Chris Hani was gunned down, apparently by a right-winger,
Janus Waluz . . . It appears that Chris was not killed only by a
right-winger who was angry with communists," writes Nkambule.
The rest of his report focuses largely on Phosa and his alleged role
in trying to implicate Mbeki in the murder of Hani, his rival for high
office. Phosa's purported collaborators are Sexwale, Ramaphosa, Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela and Jacob Zuma, who is now South Africa's deputy
president.
Nkambule's affidavit - as published in the Sunday Times - goes over
the same ground, but also refers to his belief, following a
conversation with Phosa, that Waluz has been induced to "disclose"
Mbeki's alleged role as an instigator and accessory in the Hani murder
and to put his disclosure in writing. Nkambule explains that he wrote
his affidavit to enable police to "investigate the circumstances
surrounding the sale of the Moputu arms shipment and its link to Chris
Hani's murder", as well as the alleged role of Phosa "and others" in
attempting to taint Mbeki with the killing.
Nkambule's untested report and affidavit, much of which consists of
hearsay rather than direct evidence, contradicts a central finding in
the trial and conviction of Hani's killers, Waluz and Clive
Derby-Lewis: that they acted alone. The trial judge found there was no
evidence of an orchestrated right-wing conspiracy acting with the
connivance or support of the security forces of the old order, still
less of a conspiracy reaching into the heart of the ANC. Waluz and
Derby-Lewis have emphatically repudiated Nkambule's allegations and
insisted that they never met or even corresponded with Mbeki. In a
statement issued on behalf of the convicted assassins, Derby-Lewis's
wife, Gaye, notes that neither investigators from Britain nor Germany
deployed by the prosecution during the trial, nor an investigator
acting on behalf of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission later,
found any evidence of a conspiracy. She dismisses Nkambule as "a fraud
and a liar" and denies the existence of Waluz's written
disclosure.
Tshwete himself cast doubt on Nkambule's report and affidavit when he
referred to their contents as "rumours". But he explained, "I have to
satisfy myself that there is nothing in them." No one questions the
right of the police to investigate Nkambule's allegations. It is their
duty as well as their right to do so once Nkambule has made a sworn
statement to them. But that does not justify Tshwete's decision to name
the three on television as the heads of an alleged conspiracy. Given
Nkambule's checkered past and the findings of the ANC internal inquiry
that he was a "factionalist" driven by a desire for personal gain,
Tshwete had no right to identify the persons Nkambule named.
But once Tshwete had decided to name the alleged conspirators why did
he only pick out Ramaphosa, Sexwale and Phosa and not their alleged
co-conspirators Modise, Madikizela-Mandela and Zuma? And if the threat
to Mbeki was so serious, why did the ANC wait so long to involve the
police, given that they had Nkambule's first report in November 1998?
One explanation is that Tshwete focused on the three businessmen
because they constitute a bigger threat to Mbeki than the others - not
as coup leaders but as potential rivals outside government but
functioning within the permissible parameters of the ANC's
constitution. It was a pre-emptive blow taken only when the presidency
began to run into trouble.
In the past each of the three alleged conspirators have challenged
Mbeki, or his chosen candidate, for top-level positions. Mbeki
outmanoeuvred them in turn: Rampahosa in 1993-4, Sexwale in 1997 and
Phosa in 1999. Of the three only Ramaphosa is widely expected to return
to politics - and as a presidential candidate.
Tshwete told the parliamentary safety and security committee that he
did not consult either Mbeki or the ANC about his decision to
investigate the plot. Most people will probably agree with the comment
of Richard Calland of Idasa that Tshwete's statement is simply
"incredible". He would surely have been fired from his ministerial post
if he had not first consulted the president, the prime target of the
alleged conspiracy.
Equally, the idea that Tshwete would have struck a pre-emptive blow
against Mbeki's rivals by naming them without the president's approval
seems unbelievable. In an interview with Jon Snow on British television
news on May 3, Mbeki distanced himself from Tshwete's action. He said
that his minister "may have erred" and blamed the SABC interviewer for
having tricked him into naming the three. Saying that he did not
believe they were part of a plot to unseat or harm him, the president
shifted the focus of attention from the "conspirators" to the Hani
allegations. "When an allegation is made about the possible involvement
of the president in murder, I don't think you can ignore that," he told
Snow. Nevertheless there is prima facie evidence that he approved the
naming of the three in advance.
On the same night that Tshwete startled the nation on SABC 1, Mbeki
was interviewed on e-tv. His remarks included a reference to a
"conspiracy" by unidentified businessmen: "It's a conspiratorial thing.
I know you have business people who say, 'We will set up a fund to
promote a political candidate and we will then try to influence
particular journalists [to support him]'." Another extract reads: ". .
. people have political ambitions. That's fine but the manner in which
they pursue their ambitions [is not] . . . We need to create space so
that all competitors can compete openly . . . open debate about
everything, including the presidency."
Tshwete's disclosure, coupled with Mbeki's comments, suggests that
this was another concerted move to flush out contenders for the
presidency. In August last year reports appeared that official
intelligence agencies were investigating Ramaphosa on suspicion of
raising funds for a presidential challenge. Another report said that
American and British politicians and businessmen wanted to recruit him
as a more acceptable alternative to Mbeki. Ramaphosa denied both
reports but, to quote Alan Fine of Business Day, "it may have been a
warning shot against even the thought of challenging a presidential
incumbent under fire."
Then on April 3 this year Jacob Zuma issued an unsolicited disclaimer
- that he would not be challenging Mbeki for the party leadership at
the ANC national conference - to a bemused public. As Caroline Dempster
of the BBC aptly put it, it was "a reaction before it even happened."
But the context that led up to it is important. In the preceding months
the deputy president was a victim of whispering campaigns linking him
with supporting Phosa in Mpumalanga and a plot to unseat Mbeki. At the
same time he distinguished himself with his firm line on the link
between HIV and Aids in contrast to Mbeki's prevarication on the issue
and defended the inclusion of the Heath unit in the multiagency
investigation of the R43.8-billion arms deal. Only later did Zuma sign
a highly critical letter attacking the standing committee on public
accounts, a letter that Scopa chairman Gavin Woods dubbed
"out-of-character".
Tshwete himself, now 62 and with a reputation as a loyal Mbeki
lieutenant, may harbour ambitions for higher political office. He has
tasted life at the top, having been sworn in as acting president late
last year in the absence of Mbeki and Zuma and his television
disclosure may have been designed to ingratiate himself with the
president. Addressing a Cosatu rally in Umtata on May 1, he described
reports that either he, national chairman Mosiuoa Lekota or Eastern
Cape premier Makhenkesi Stofile were vying for the deputy presidency as
"full of untruths".
Have the repercussions of the alleged conspiracy weakened or
strengthened the president and made challenges for top positions at the
2002 national conference more or less likely? The "plot" was treated
with incredulity abroad and has probably added to western governments'
reservations about Mbeki. Africa Confidential comments that Mbeki can
regain credibility only by firing Tswhete, his close ally. Since that
is unlikely, "the alleged coup leaves the president dangerously
exposed".
Perhaps in recognition of that danger loyalists have been closing
ranks behind the president. As well as the 11 professionals, whose full
page advertisement in the Sunday Times singing his praise and blaming
the racist media was greeted with dismay and disbelief, there have been
a string of motions of support in Parliament, the National Council of
Provinces, the ANC Women's League and the ANC Youth League.
Ramaphosa remains a potential threat to Mbeki. In his reaction to the
latest allegation against him, Ramaphosa did not rule out the
possibility of running for the presidency while Sexwale and Phosa did.
Ramaphosa, however, is likely to bide his time. At the age of 48 he can
afford to wait until 2009 before making a presidential bid, an idea
that Mandela implicitly endorsed at the Trafalgar Square concert. One
of Ramaphosa's great strengths as a politician is patience. His
successful quest to become ANC secretary general in 1991, when he
defeated the incumbent Alfred Nzo, who was backed by Mandela, is proof
of that. In the months that preceded the election he kept his head
beneath the parapet and declined repeated requests for
interviews.
If, as anticipated, Ramaphosa waits until 2009 he could be rewarded
for his patience. But this is not to eliminate the possibility of an
earlier Ramaphosa challenge. Eighteen months is more than enough for
radical and even unforseen changes of fortune within the ANC. Much will
depend on what happens at the party provincial congresses later this
year, when delegates to the 2002 national conference will be
chosen.
The suspension of the provincial executives in Gauteng, the Free State
and, most recently, the Northern Province and their replacement by an
interim leadership appointed by ANC head office has generated
low-volume grumbles about dictatorship from the centre, with which
Mbeki is obviously closely associated. His decision to select
provincial premiers who have not been elected to the chair of their
respective provincial executives has not won him points from the
supporters of the bypassed chairpersons. The manner in which Gauteng
premier Mathole Mokshekga was pushed aside to make way for Mbhazima
Shilowa in Gauteng is a case in point.
Mbeki may yet pay the price of "democratic centralism". Under that
system of governance accusing fingers point in one direction only if
promises are unfulfilled, hopes dashed and disillusionment magnified.
Rising unemployment and the spread of HIV-Aids mean that Mbeki is not
absolutely secure from a switch in loyalty within the ANC. That goes
some way to explain the propensity of the leadership to blame party
divisions on agent provocateurs and shadowy "forces opposed to change"
rather than on legitimate political criticism of government
performance.
One repercussion of the plot allegations may be to make party members
less open about how they express their criticisms and preferences. The
president assured Jon Snow during his May 3 interview that anybody
could contest any position in the ANC. "They must do it openly, within
the context of the ANC . . . It is not a problem whatsoever. I would
encourage it and I would be against the kind of whispering campaigns
because they produce rumours and destabilise. Let people participate
without fear." But a report from North West province claims that lobby
groups are campaigning for their preferred leaders in secrecy - through
unsigned letters and e-mails - for fear of the heavy hand of the
national executive committee.
A North West provincial executive member who asked not to be named
told The Citizen that for the first time provinces could go to the
congress without having reached consensus on prospective candidates,
because lobbying in support of a list of candidates would be
interpreted as "sowing divisions by the supporters of the other list".
In such circumstances opposition might be less vocal, but it would not
go away.
Mbeki's political stamina, consummate skill in controlling the party
machine to his advantage, and, when he chooses to deploy it, his
undoubted ability to turn on the charm for political ends will stand
him in good stead. While he is well positioned to secure a second
presidential term, he is not assured of success.
