US President Barack Obama embracing South African President Jacob Zuma
(right) during the memorial service for the late South African President
Nelson Mandela at FNB Stadium on December 10, 2013 in Johannesburg. A
survey conducted for the Sunday Times newspaper showed 51 per cent of
registered voters of the ruling African National Congress want Zuma to
resign as he seemingly battles to fill Mandela’s shoes. PHOTO | AFP
JOHANNESBURG
As
South Africa’s democracy icon Nelson Mandela was being buried Sunday,
an opinion poll showed his political heir Jacob Zuma losing support over
claims of self-enrichment.
A survey conducted for the
Sunday Times newspaper showed 51 per cent of registered voters of the
ruling African National Congress want Zuma to resign as he seemingly
battles to fill Mandela’s shoes.
The results of the
survey conducted by the Ipsos market research company comes in the same
week that Zuma was booed at a memorial service for Mandela in Soweto.
Of
the 1,000 ANC voters polled in a representative survey, 33 per cent
said they were less likely to vote for the ANC over allegations that
Zuma used public money to upgrade his luxury private residence to the
tune of some $20 million.
Forty-two per cent said they believed he had abused taxpayer funds.
On
Tuesday, South Africans booed their president at a memorial service
attended by tens of thousands of people for Mandela, whose legacy is one
of selflessness and sacrifice. (READ: They are lunatics, ANC says of those who jeered Zuma)
Many
of those who jeered later spoke of their disillusionment and anger at
Zuma’s lifestyle at a time that many South Africans remain poor,
unemployed, and without formal housing in a society that is among the
world’s most unequal.
Zuma’s immediate predecessor
Thabo Mbeki, though unpopular at the time of his party ouster by Zuma in
2008, received a warm welcome at the memorial.
Sunday, Zuma said it was incumbent on them to carry on Mandela’s legacy.
“We
have to take the legacy forward,” Zuma said in an address to Mandela’s
state funeral in the former leader’s boyhood home of Qunu.
“As your journey ends today ours must continue in earnest,” he said.
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