On Saturday, Jacob Zuma, the ex-president of South Africa, expressed concern over the significant poverty faced by Black South Africans. He pledged to generate employment opportunities and combat crime while introducing his new political party’s manifesto in anticipation of the forthcoming elections.

Addressing a large crowd at Johannesburg’s Orlando Stadium, he outlined plans to establish factories for widespread employment and offer free education to the nation’s youth.

He has additionally committed to amending the nation’s Constitution to bolster the authority of traditional leaders, arguing that their societal role has been diminished by the increased powers granted to magistrates and judges.

Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe party, referred to locally as the MK Party, has become a notable contender in South Africa’s forthcoming elections since its inception in December of last year.

He is presently engaged in a legal dispute with the country’s electoral body, the Independent Electoral Commission.

He has lodged an appeal against a court ruling that disqualified him from running in the election due to his criminal record. Zuma was handed a 15-month prison sentence for flouting a court directive to appear before a judicial inquiry investigating corruption allegations within government and state-owned enterprises during his tenure as president from 2009 to 2018. 

In 2018, he resigned as the nation’s president amid widespread corruption accusations, but he has reentered the political arena with aspirations to reclaim the presidency.

“My main concern is that South Africa has an excessive number of political parties. Far too many. They exacerbate the suffering of our people,” Zuma expressed to his supporters, many of whom had journeyed from other provinces like Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal, where he still commands significant backing.

The former president attributes the country’s elevated crime rates to poverty among black citizens.

“Victims of crime are often individuals of Black ethnicity. This is primarily attributable to poverty,” he remarked. “People endure hunger, having nothing to sustain them. So, if food is readily available nearby, what other recourse do they have?”

Zuma articulated that his party’s objective is to secure more than 65% of the national vote in the impending elections, enabling them to enact significant alterations to the country’s constitution.

Recent surveys and expert analyses indicate that the ruling African National Congress may receive less than 50% of the national vote in the forthcoming elections, necessitating potential coalition formations with smaller parties to retain governance.

South Africans are scheduled to cast their votes on May 29th.

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