This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/08/world/africa/south-africans-vote-as-president-zuma-seeks-second-term.html
The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 5 | Version 6 |
---|---|
South Africans Vote as Zuma Seeks Second Term as President | South Africans Vote as Zuma Seeks Second Term as President |
(about 4 hours later) | |
MARIKANA, South Africa — Millions of South Africans, some from a generation of “born frees” voting for the first time, cast their ballots on Wednesday in the fifth national elections since the end of apartheid after a campaign that highlighted the governing African National Congress’s internal cracks and President Jacob G. Zuma’s growing unpopularity. | |
Long before 7 a.m., when polls opened, voters in some places formed lines at election centers, less to choose from a long list of parties than to pronounce judgment on the A.N.C., the liberation movement that has governed since the end of apartheid in 1994 but which has become mired in corruption scandals in recent years. Polls have predicted that, though the A.N.C. will steamroll to another victory, it will garner fewer votes than in the past. | |
In several poor, black townships surrounding Johannesburg, rioting youths, angry at living conditions, have held protests for months and tried to bar the A.N.C. from their communities. Rioters in one such township, Bekkersdal, set fire to polling stations overnight. But, several hours after voting got underway, there had been no reports of unrest, despite delays in opening some 2,500 of the 22,000 voting locations. | |
In Marikana, about 70 miles northwest of Johannesburg where the police killed 34 miners involved in a wildcat strike in 2012, voting started peacefully. Last week, Mr. Zuma canceled a visit here at the last minute, after protesters angry at the government’s handling of the strike and its aftermath burned down an A.N.C. office. Several voters at one station near a squatters’ camp voiced support for the A.N.C., underscoring the party’s continuing strength even in places with many disaffected residents. | |
“I thought my vote would make a difference and bring jobs,” said Aram Lentsa Kgahloe, 38, a day laborer who had gone to the polling site at 2 a.m. to be first in line and who had voted for the A.N.C. “I know the party’s history,” he said. | |
The Economic Freedom Fighters, a party founded less than a year ago by Julius Malema, the former head of the A.N.C.'s youth wing, has been attracting disaffected young voters here and in the townships with its message of nationalizing mines and other economic assets without compensation. “We have done our work. Now the ball is in the court of South Africa,” Mr. Malema said as he voted in the north of the country. | The Economic Freedom Fighters, a party founded less than a year ago by Julius Malema, the former head of the A.N.C.'s youth wing, has been attracting disaffected young voters here and in the townships with its message of nationalizing mines and other economic assets without compensation. “We have done our work. Now the ball is in the court of South Africa,” Mr. Malema said as he voted in the north of the country. |
The main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, is expected to do better than in the 2009 election. Focusing on the need to create jobs, the Democratic Alliance has widened its appeal beyond its traditional core of white South Africans by drawing in middle-class blacks and campaigning in black townships. It is also trying to spread its geographical base beyond its stronghold in and around Cape Town, where the party leader, Helen Zille, cast her ballot on Wednesday after standing in line with other voters. | |
In 2009, the A.N.C. won just under two-thirds of the vote. Mr. Zuma predicted that this time his party would capture a two-thirds majority, which would bring greater powers to govern and would give the party a badly needed mandate. Polls indicate, however, that the party’s support will shrink by a few percentage points. | |
That would still keep the A.N.C. as the dominant force in the 400-seat Parliament, which elects the president. Analysts have said, however, that if the A.N.C. gets less than 60 percent of the vote, Mr. Zuma’s standing in the party and as president could be at risk. By law, Mr. Zuma is limited to two terms as president. | |
Mr. Zuma took office five years ago only after a corruption case against him was dropped at the last minute. His influence declined steadily during his first term amid charges of financial impropriety, to the extent that he was booed loudly during a national memorial for former President Nelson Mandela in December, humiliating him in front of the world leaders in attendance. In March, South Africa’s anticorruption watchdog released a report detailing how $23 million in public funds had been misused to make upgrades to the president’s rural homestead in the small settlement of Nkandla. | |
After long ignoring the report, Mr. Zuma said on Monday that voters did not care about the $23 million in upgrades. Only “the bright people” cared, he said, mentioning the news media and the political opposition. Mr. Zuma also surprised many by arguing that the upgrades were necessary to ensure the safety of his homestead because criminals invaded the property 15 years ago and raped his wife. | After long ignoring the report, Mr. Zuma said on Monday that voters did not care about the $23 million in upgrades. Only “the bright people” cared, he said, mentioning the news media and the political opposition. Mr. Zuma also surprised many by arguing that the upgrades were necessary to ensure the safety of his homestead because criminals invaded the property 15 years ago and raped his wife. |
Live television coverage on Wednesday showed Mr. Zuma, surrounded by a scrum of journalists, aides and bodyguards, voting in a schoolroom in Nkandla, which is in KwaZulu-Natal Province, southeast of Johannesburg. | |
He seemed relaxed but described the campaign as “very challenging.” | He seemed relaxed but described the campaign as “very challenging.” |
“I hope that all voters will cast their votes free, without any problems,” he said, according to news reports. “This is our right that we fought for.” | “I hope that all voters will cast their votes free, without any problems,” he said, according to news reports. “This is our right that we fought for.” |
“The results will be very good,” he added. | |
As corruption has become entrenched, the A.N.C. has drawn fierce criticism from longtime allies, including Archbishop Desmond M. Tutu, who was awarded the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize for his fight against apartheid. Archbishop Tutu was quoted in the South African news media as saying that he was glad that Mr. Mandela was not alive to witness the direction in which the A.N.C. had taken the country. | |
As he voted in Cape Town on Wednesday, the archbishop recalled the struggle for democracy, saying “people died for this, people were imprisoned, people suffered. So we mustn’t waste it. We must keep on remembering we got this at a very great price.” | |
Former allies of the A.N.C. and defectors have formed other parties contesting Wednesday’s election. Some A.N.C. dissidents led a “Vote No” campaign that urged South Africans to support other, smaller parties or to spoil their ballots in a show of protest. | |
According to official statistics, just over 25 million South Africans — almost half the estimated population of 53 million — are registered to vote, representing about three quarters of the eligible electorate. Registration is much lower, however, among the hundreds of thousands of born frees, 18- and 19-year-olds who grew up with no direct experience of apartheid. According to the statistics, only about a third of them registered to vote. | |
Full official results are not expected before Friday. |