PRETORIA, South Africa
South Africa's third biggest political party, led by former president Jacob Zuma, has filed legal papers seeking to halt the first sitting of Parliament scheduled for Friday to elect the country's president.
Zuma’s uMkhonto weSizwe Party
has said none of its 58 newly elected lawmakers will attend the sitting. The
party earlier filed objections with the Independent Electoral Commission
alleging widespread irregularities in national
elections last month. The party received just over 14% of the vote.
The party, also known as MK,
has not publicly offered evidence to back up its allegations. The commission
has said it has addressed all objections.
The legal challenge now asks
the Constitutional Court to set aside the commission's decision to declare the
election free and fair, and to order the president to call another election.
The election saw the ruling
African National Congress party lose its majority in parliament for the first
time since taking power three decades ago at the end of the apartheid era.
The ANC now seeks to form a
government of national unity with various opposition parties,
The outcome of those talks
will determine who parliament chooses as South Africa's president. President
Cyril Ramaphosa, Zuma's rival, is seeking re-election for a second term.
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