
Chief Justice Raymond Zondo led
Ramaphosa’s oath of office ceremony before lawmakers, foreign dignitaries,
religious and traditional leaders and cheering supporters at the Union
Buildings, the seat of government.
“In the presence of everyone assembled here, and in full
realisation of the high calling I assume as President… I Matamela Cyril
Ramaphosa swear that I will be faithful to the Republic of South Africa,”
Ramaphosa said.
Lawmakers voted overwhelmingly to re-elect the 71-year-old last week, after a May 29 general election that produced no outright winner.
Numerous heads of state, including Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, Angola’s Joao Lourenco, Congo Brazzaville’s Denis Sassou Nguesso and Eswatini’s absolute leader King Mswati III attended the inauguration.
Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo poses for a s he arrives ahead of the inauguration of South Africa's Cypril Ramaphosa as President at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on June 19, 2024.
Guests in
suits, fancy dresses and coats to keep warm in the chilly winter weather
started to arrive early in the morning amid a heavy police presence.
VIPs, some
singing anti-apartheid struggle songs, were allowed into a small amphitheatre
within the imposing, sandstone government building.
Other attendees,
some holding South African flags, sat on a lawn outside as dancers and
musicians performed on a big stage.
After
Ramaphosa took the oath, a band played the national anthem, followed by a
21-gun salute and a fly past by army helicopters towing large South African
flags.
It was the
third time Ramaphosa took the oath.
The former
trade unionist turned millionaire businessman first came to power in 2018,
after his predecessor and rival Jacob Zuma was forced out before the end of his
term under the cloud of corruption allegations.
Ramaphosa
was then re-appointed for a full five-year term in 2019. In South Africa,
voters elect the parliament which then votes for the president.
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Ramaphosa promised a new dawn for South Africa, launched an anti-graft drive and started to reform a collapsing energy system.
But under his watch, the economy languished, blighted by power cuts, crime remained rife and unemployment increased to 32.9 percent.
In May, he led the ANC into yet another vote, but the historied party of the late Nelson Mandela came out bruised.
It won only 40 percent — down from 57.5 percent five years earlier.
For the first time since the advent of democracy in 1994, it lost its absolute majority in parliament and was left scrambling to find coalition partners to remain in power.
It has since agreed to form what it calls a national unity government with several other parties.
They include the centre-right Democratic Alliance (DA), the Zulu nationalist Inkatha Freedom Party, the anti-immigration Patriotic Alliance and the small centre-left GOOD party.
The deal allowed Ramaphosa to comfortably see off a last-minute challenge by firebrand leftist politician Julius Malema, with 283 lawmakers in the 400-seat National Assembly voting to put him back in office.
But it has faced a vociferous opposition from the left, with Malema’s Economic Freedom Fighters and former president Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) refusing to take part and denouncing the inclusion of right-wing parties and the white-led, free-market DA.
MK came third in the election but has contested the results.
Party spokesman Nhlamulo Ndhlela said in a statement that its lawmakers would snub the “farcical inauguration of Cyril Ramaphosa as the puppet DA-sponsored President”, also using a racial slur to describe the ANC leader.
Ramaphosa is expected to announce his cabinet within days of his inauguration, as talks with coalition members continue.
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