South Africa’s Home Affairs Minister, Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma, has been appointed as the head of the African Union (AU). By the
virtue of the new position, she becomes the first female head of the African
Union.
The 63 year-old veteran apartheid
fighter became the first AU leader after a hotly contested election which ended in a
tie in January; leaving 69-year-old
incumbent Jean Ping of Gabon in power after the Francophone Africa community
firmly supported Ping while the Southern African Development Community firmly
stood behind Zuma. Neither side could secure the necessary two-thirds majority
to win the election.
Yesterday’s election took place in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. She was elected by the 54-member pan-African bloc.
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma is the
ex-wife of South African President Jacob Zuma. She has served on every South
African president cabinet since Nelson Mandela became the country’s first black
leader.
Under the Mandela administration, she
served as the Health Minister and helped to transform the country's segregated
health system. She is remembered for introducing legislation that overhauled
the highly unequal system and gave the poor access to free basic care.
She went on to become Foreign Minister
for a decade, earning praise for her shuttle diplomacy to end the war in the
Democratic Republic of Congo.
As an interior minister under her
ex-husband administration, she was praised for turning around a ministry mired
in gross mismanagement to achieve the first clean audit in 16 years.
On
assuming the position as the leader of the union, Dlamini-Zuma will have to deal with the aftermath of recent
coups in Guinea Bissau and Mali. Ping has been criticized as being slow and
ineffective in his response to last year's coup in Cote d'Ivoire and the
revolution in Libya.
In her campaign to win the
pan-African bloc's top job, she vowed to work at making it "a more
efficient and effective organisation."
Known for her competent management
and stern personality, Dlamini-Zuma was born on January 27, 1949, in the
eastern province of KwaZulu-Natal.
Although she later trained as a
Doctor, Dlamini-Zuma took up politics in high school.
In the 1970s she went into exile,
and studied in Britain at the universities of Bristol and Liverpool, while
helping to organise anti-apartheid movement overseas. When the ban on the African
National Congress was lifted in 1990, she returned home.
Keith Gottschalk of the University
of the Western Cape describes her as "an astute politician, a veteran, the
experience she acquired as foreign minister puts her in good stead to take over
this role."
Mehari Maru of Institute of Security Studies in Addis Ababa
said, although Zuma is a more
"professional, more accountable and more proficient" person than Ping
, she warned it would likely take months for a change in leadership strategy to
take place.
Meanwhile, having ousted incumbent
French-speaker, Jean Ping of Gabon, Zuma has refused to be labeled an
English-speaking candidate.
"I am not Anglophone, I'm
Zulu," she said.
She stated that while performing her
role as the AU head, she would be "implementing programmes... agreed upon
by everybody" rather than "consulting the Anglophone and the
Francophone."
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