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Mbeki accuses 'ultra-leftists' of abusing ANC



Mbeki accuses 'ultra-leftists' of abusing ANC membership
>From Patrick Laurence in Johannesburg



SOUTH AFRICA: The 51st national conference of South Africa's ruling
African National Congress ended yesterday with an attack by President Thabo
Mbeki on "factionalists" who had "abused their membership of the ANC" during
elections for a new national executive committee.

There was little doubt that he was referring to the "ultra-leftists" in the
South African Communist Party (SACP) and the Congress of South African Trade
Unions (Cosatu) that he had previously accused of conspiring to take over
the ANC. Hinting that the "ultra-left factionalists" would be punished for
secretly distributing lists of their ideological kinsmen, Mr Mbeki said:
"Our movement will have to take stern action against those who have thus
acted to divide our movement, even as they sat among us wearing ANC
T-shirts." The prospect of an on-going witch hunt for "ultra-leftists" - who
have yet to be named publicly - was foreshadowed in his closing address,
even though there were ringing calls for unity between the ANC and its SACP
and Cosatu allies during the conference by delegates from across the
ideological spectrum, Mr Mbeki not excluded.

The results of the election for a new national executive committee confirmed
that the balance of power in the ANC-led alliance - which provides for
cross-membership of the three allied organisations - has shifted decisively
in favour of the increasingly pro-capitalist and pro-nationalist forces led
by Mr Mbeki. One sign of that shift was the re-election of five of the six
permanent ANC officer bearers. The only exception was the election of Ms
Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele, a staunch Mbeki supporter, as deputy
secretary-general, in the place of Ms Thenjiwe Mthintso, a member of the
SACP central committee.

The election of the 60 ordinary members of the ANC told its own tale.
Finance Minister Mr Trevor Manuel, a vocal champion of the government's
investor-friendly macro-economic policy and of a disciplined budgetary
policy, topped the list. He received 2,800 of the roughly 3,000 votes.

Mr Cyril Ramaphosa, a former trade union leader and ANC secretary-general
who has become a successful businessman, garnered the second highest number
of votes. A powerful protagonist of the new class of black moguls, his
election highlighted the ANC's increasingly prominent role as a vehicle for
black capitalism rather than people's socialism.




© The Irish Times




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