JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - President Cyril Ramaphosa's re-election as leader of South Africa's ruling party has strengthened his hold on power, but a core of vocal opponents in its new executive suggests the country's path to much-needed reforms will remain a rocky one.
The Biden Administration is attempting to court Africa’s 1.3 billion people at this week's U.S.-Africa Summit in Washington, D.C., the first U.S. summit in eight years.
As Cyril Ramaphosa announces steps to implement the State Capture inquiry’s recommendations, the ANC says it has distanced itself from those in its ranks ‘who have been involved in corruption or who are complicit in State Capture’. But what this means in practice remains to be seen.