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Cyril Ramaphosa is the new South African President

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The former Deputy President and recently selected ruling African National Congress (ANC) president Cyril Ramaphosa (66) is now the fifth head of state and Government in South Africa. Cde Ramaphosa was elected after former President Jacob Zuma (76) officially resigned on Wednesday night during a special broadcast that was beamed live on television.

The embattled Zuma bowed to pressure from his ANC and opposition parties to push him out.
He was due to complete his term of office next year.
According to a Times Live report, Chief Justice Mogoeng presided over the swearing-in of President Ramaphosa by reading out the oath of office for him to repeat.

The ceremony was attended by first lady Dr Tshepo Motsepe‚ Speaker of the National Assembly Baleka Mbete‚ ministers‚ deputy ministers and opposition leaders at Tuynhuis‚ the president’s Cape Town offices.
The Chief Justice congratulated the new president after he officially signed and sealed the oath of office.

In an interview with The Herald, Tanzania-based Zimbabwean political scientist and conflict mediation consultant Tafadzwa Mugwadi said, “It was highly expectable that the legendary relations between SA and Zimbabwe are going to rise to a notch higher given that the two new presidents have a lot in common having faced unbridled vilification by the then leaders.

“It’s an interesting tale of two vice presidents (Cdes Ramaphosa and Emmerson Mnangagwa), who rose against all odds and hurdles to rescue two nations, which had been captured by the Guptas in the case of SA, and the criminal G40 elements in Zimbabwe.”

Mugwadi said events in Zimbabwe and South Africa, “attest to the fact that Sadc has come of age in terms of peaceful management of transitions, and that Africa in its entirety must draw lifetime lessons from Zimbabwe and South Africa that power transfer can be done without unnecessary loss of blood.”

Another political analyst Godwin Mureriwa said, Sadc in general and Zimbabwe in particular, respect the universally accepted principle of non-interference in the domestic affairs of any country.
“The will of the people is supreme and (former President) Zuma’s resignation was in the interest of South Africa. This is reminiscent of former President Mugabe’s peaceful exit here,” he said.


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