South Africa protesters torch schools in Limpopo province

South Africa has a long history of street protests
South Africa has a long history of street protests

BBC |  Protesters have burnt 13 schools in two areas in South Africa’s northern Limpopo province in a violent dispute over district boundaries, police say. Government officials appealed for an end to the violence, saying it affected the education of hundreds of children. Protesters say moves to include their neighbourhoods into a new municipality would delay efforts to get them better housing and water.

South Africa is due to hold key local government elections in August. Opposition parties hope to make gains at the polls, arguing that the governing African National Congress (ANC) has failed to improve basic services during its 22-year rule.

The ANC disputes this, saying most people have a far better standard of living since it took power at the end of minority rule in 1994.

Eight of the 13 schools were torched overnight, bringing to 13 the number of schools targeted since Monday, reports the BBC’s Pumza Fihlani from the main city Johannesburg.

The government says communities will be worse off by destroying buildings
The government says communities will be worse off by destroying buildings

On Friday, protesters failed in a court bid to prevent the inclusion of the mainly poor Vuwani and Livubu areas into a new district authority. The government says the plan is vital to developing the two communities.

South Africa has a history of violent demonstrations, going back to the days when people protested minority rule and it seems that this attitude still remains, our correspondent says.

People are often so frustrated about the lack of basic services like electricity and water that they resort to vandalism, targeting schools, libraries and even clinics, she adds. The government has often criticised the violence, saying it would leave communities worse off. Limpopo is one of South Africa’s poorest provinces, where the ANC has won previous elections by an overwhelming majority. The main opposition parties, the Democratic Alliance and Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), hope to weaken the ANC’s hold in the province in the August elections.

South Africa: ANC backs Zuma ahead of impeachment vote

African National Congress (ANC) secretary Gwede Mantashe addresses the media in Johannesburg, April 1. The ANC offered its backing to President Jacob Zuma ahead of a parliamentary debate on whether the president should be impeached.
African National Congress (ANC) secretary Gwede Mantashe addresses the media in Johannesburg, April 1. The ANC offered its backing to President Jacob Zuma ahead of a parliamentary debate on whether the president should be impeached.

BY   |  Newsweek/

South Africa’s governing party have backed President Jacob Zuma, ahead of an upcoming vote to impeach him.

The motion to remove Zuma from office—which is being spearheaded by the main opposition party Democratic Alliance (DA)—came after South Africa’s top court ruled that Zuma had failed to uphold the constitution in a scandal relating to state-funded improvements on his homestead in Nkandla, in the coastal province of KwaZulu-Natal.

The Constitutional Court ruling concerned Zuma’s failure to heed a 2014 report by Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, which found that the president had “benefited unduly” from upgrades to his home—including a swimming pool and cattle ranch—that cost an estimated 246 million rand ($23 million at the time) and that the president should pay back some of the funds. Zuma apologized live on television on Friday for the “frustration and confusion” the Nkandla scandal had caused and said he would comply with the court’s ruling.

After meeting in Cape Town on Monday, top ANC officials accepted Zuma’s apology and offered the president their full support. ANC General Secretary Gwede Mantashe said that the party wanted to see the Constitutional Court ruling “implemented to the letter” but insisted that the ruling did not mean that the president had broken his oath of office, according to South Africa’s Times Live news site.

Veteran ANC figures, including Ahmed Kathrada —who was jailed alongside Nelson Mandela in 1964 for trying to overthrow the apartheid government—have called on Zuma to resign in the wake of the scandal. Mantashe said that the ANC would engage with dissident voices in the party in the wake of the decision to back Zuma.

The motion to impeach Zuma is to be debated in South Africa’s Parliament on Tuesday, but is unlikely to pass due to the ANC’s massive majority—Zuma’s party controls 249 out of 400 seats in the National Assembly and a two-thirds majority is required by the opposition for the motion to pass. DA leader Mmusi Maimane told Newsweek that ANC assembly members must stand “in defense of the constitution” and vote to impeach Zuma.

Zuma’s potential impeachment gained traction on social media on Tuesday, with numerous South Africans calling for the president to be removed from his post:

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