Rabu, 29 Mei 2024

South Africans voting in election that might bring biggest shift since end of apartheid - Sky News

South Africans have started voting in the most competitive election since the end of apartheid, with polls suggesting the ruling party could lose its majority.

The African National Congress (ANC) first swept to power under leader Nelson Mandela in the country's first multi-racial election in 1994 and has won a majority in the six elections since.

But its vote share has steadily declined since the high of 70% in 2004 and the party could get less than 50% this year, according to polls.

Read more:
Everything you need to know about South Africa's election

In this case, the ANC would remain the largest party, which means it could enter into a formal coalition with other parties or gain support on a vote-by-vote basis in exchange for concessions.

South Africa's constitution does not lay out how a coalition could work, but if the ANC has the largest share of the vote, President Cyril Ramaphosa will likely remain in office.

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South Africans vote in key election

Voter dissatisfaction over high rates of unemployment, frequent power blackouts and corruption in party ranks lies behind the ANC's gradual fall from grace.

"The people we've spoken to today are very aware of the power of their vote," Sky News Africa correspondent Yousra Elbagir says, reporting from Johannesburg.

"They've seen the change it's brought in the past and they're hoping it can help with soaring unemployment, high inequality and the crime that has ridden their neighbourhood and the country."

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South Africa's most-tightly contested election

Although South Africans have on average become richer during the ANC's three decades in power - average incomes have been on a downward trend since 2011.

Crime is also a huge problem, with one person murdered in South Africa every 20 minutes in the last three months of 2023 and more than 130 people raped every day over the same period.

More than 27 million South Africans are registered to vote at about 23,000 polling stations.

Voters will elect provincial assemblies in each of the country's nine provinces, and a new national parliament that will then choose the next president. Final results are expected by Sunday.

Among opposition parties vying for power is the pro-business Democratic Alliance, which has formed an alliance with several smaller parties to try to broaden its appeal.

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The Economic Freedom Fighters want to nationalise mines and seize land from white farmers to address disparities, while former president Jacob Zuma is backing a new party called uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK), named after the ANC's former armed wing.

By law, South Africa's electoral commission has seven days in which to announce full results, but normally releases partial results within hours of the polling stations closing.

Voters have their say in crucial elections

Around the corner from the street where Nelson Mandela rented a room when he first moved to Johannesburg in 1941, a white canopy voting tent blocks the road.

It is a public holiday but many of the men and women lining up in Alexandra are voting early before they head to their jobs - many of them working in nearby factories that don't afford them the luxury to vote and rest.

Alexandra is one of the oldest black townships in the country and it's densely packed houses and shacks have survived several demolition threats during the Apartheid era.

The community here has since endured the worst of bad democratic governance. Rubbish litters the streets and crime has thrived during regular power cuts.

On the other side of the voting tent, an excited first time voter hopes for change for the next generation - "the future is in my hands", says Lethabo.

Further up, waiting to cast her ballot, a fifty-one year old is deeply unhappy with the state of her neighbourhood and the country. "They need to fix the roads, they need to collect the rubbish, they need to do more." She voted in 1994 and says she hasn't seen the change she voted for.

In the shadow of Sandton, called the richest square mile in Africa, the residents of Alexandra are voting for a change that translates into their everyday life.

They tell us they are voting for safety, for jobs and renewal. One that was promised in a 300 million dollar urban regeneration in 2001 that never materialised.

Thirty years on, Black South Africans want to reap the dividends of liberation.

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2024-05-29 08:35:49Z
CBMia2h0dHBzOi8vbmV3cy5za3kuY29tL3N0b3J5L3NvdXRoLWFmcmljYW5zLXZvdGUtaW4tbW9zdC1jb21wZXRpdGl2ZS1lbGVjdGlvbi1zaW5jZS1lbmQtb2YtYXBhcnRoZWlkLTEzMTQ0Nzk00gFvaHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnNreS5jb20vc3RvcnkvYW1wL3NvdXRoLWFmcmljYW5zLXZvdGUtaW4tbW9zdC1jb21wZXRpdGl2ZS1lbGVjdGlvbi1zaW5jZS1lbmQtb2YtYXBhcnRoZWlkLTEzMTQ0Nzk0

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