South African President Thabo Mbeki will resign, the SA presidency confirmed
yesterday.
"The President has obliged and will step down after all constitutional
requirements have been met," said presidential spokesman Mukoni Ratshitanga.
The ANC NEC announced it's decision to recall Mbeki from office on Saturday.
Addressing the media at the Esselen Park conference center in Kempton Park on
the East Rand, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said Mbeki's reaction to the
news was "normal".
"He didn't display shock or any depression. He welcomed the news and agreed
that he is going to participate (in the parliamentary process). If I said he was
excited I would be exaggerating."
Mantashe said the decision was taken "as an effort to heal and unite the
African National Congress."
He said the decision was a political way to deal with the implications of
Pietermaritzburg High Court Judge Chris Nicholson's ruling that Mbeki may have
been involved in a political conspiracy against ruling party leader Jacob Zuma.
"The biggest worry of the ANC had been the question of a reversal of the
closure of the chapter (that the Nicholson judgment seemed to have promised)."
The National Prosecuting Authority's decision to appeal the judgment had
become a worry, said Mantashe.
"If pursued it will continue to be a point of division for the ANC."
When asked whether a vote had been taken to reach the decision, Mantashe
said: "We discussed until we reached a consensus".
When asked what the reaction would be if other cabinet ministers were to
resign, Mantashe said they were considered on the one hand, deployees who had
mutual respect and commitment to the ANC, but on the other hand they were also
individuals.
"In the coming days the president of the ANC will meet with ANC deployees in
government to assure them that the ANC would wish for them to remain in
government... (but) if that individual opts out of the movement, we cannot chain
them to the process. we will respect their decisions."
Earlier on Saturday, deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka's spokesman
Denzel Taylor said that Mlambo-Ngcuka would hand in her resignation depending on
whether Mbeki hands in his resignation.
"I can confirm that the deputy president will resign if the President is
asked to step down and resigns accordingly," Taylor said.
"She was appointed by the President and has served him loyally. She feels
that it is the right thing to do."
Mantashe said that the process following the decision to recall Mbeki was now
out of the ANC's hands.
"It is now up to Parliament to work out a formula to implement the decision.
" We are quite patient for Parliament to develop a system."
ANC deputy secretary-general Thandi Modise said Mbeki "would now do whatever
he wants to do".
"He does have a responsibility to our neighbors which he will conclude," she
said.
Mantashe added that the decision was not a punishment.
"Mbeki will be given space to participate in activities," he said.
Mantashe said there was no decision yet on an early election.
"The person in charge is Mbeki until he resigns because we don 't create
ruptures and we don't appoint a president on top of another president."
"We share their (SA citizens) desire for stability and we believe our
decision is in the interests of making that security".
Mbeki became president in 1999, taking over from Nelson Mandela.
He was the head of the ANC from 1997 until he lost a battle for power at the
ANC's national conference in Polokwane in December 2007, when Zuma, his former
deputy president, became the head of the organization.