Under the present government, Mbeki claims, the state has lost control


 Former South African president Thabo Mbeki has spoken out publicly for the first time, criticizing the current government. In doing so, he was rebutting the claims advanced by the US ambassador. The ANC is protecting Ramaphosa from responsibility for his involvement in the Phala Phala controversy, according to Mbeki, who has long been an outspoken critic of the Ramaphosa administration. The wheels have gone off the bus, he said, citing US accusations that his country supplied weaponry to Russia. Thabo Mbeki, the country's former president, claimed that the situation was totally chaotic. The present power outage poses a threat to the economy, and this move is a response to that threat. Nearly every company has taken some kind of harm, and those who have managed to stay afloat are truly struggling. Those who disagree with Thabo Mbeki have shown that they concur with his claims. The populace at large appears to believe that nothing is stable at this point. The majority of President Cyril Ramaphosa's addresses to the nation have been filled with promises. Thabo Mbeki isn't the only one who has been demanding Ramaphosa's resignation; some of his supporters have joined him. He was ruled ineligible to run again, according to their declaration. It is not justified to keep Ramaphosa in office. "He must be the first ANC president to lose elections," a social critic said, "in order to prevent the economic implosion of South Africa." Even when the oil crisis is at its worst, how do you plan to keep the economy growing and jobs coming? There was an error in the printing of our currency, poverty is on the rise, and income disparity has never been higher. The drop has been seen by others as well. According to ANC insiders, former president Thabo Mbeki is plotting to send a second letter to the party's vice president, Paul Mashatile. Evidently, the ex-ANC leader will not rest until all of his or her issues with responsibility are addressed. In a Saturday address to ANC supporters in Kwa-Zulu Natal, Ramaphosa admitted that concerns around his nomination for power minister existed. It was the right choice, though, and he now knows it.

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