Reports that Britain’s defence ministry is making plans to keep the ANC in power are merely an attempt to distract South Africans from its real plan to unseat President Jacob Zuma, the party said on Monday.
“We know they want to divert us from the real story,” spokesman Zizi Kodwa said.
He was responding to a report by news publication Vice that a group of officials from Britain’s Royal College of Defence Studies visited South Africa last year to “assess the political threats to continuing ANC rule in South Africa”.
The officers’ task was to “devise a medium-term strategy, with concrete deliverables, for the party to retain power at the next general election”.
Vice reported that the delegation visited the JSE and the offices of British platinum miner Lonmin.
Kodwa accused Britain and the US of using undemocratic means to change a democratically elected government.
“It has done so in many other countries, working with America as part of a Western coalition, to unseat democratically elected government through undemocratic means. They are part of that agenda,” he said.
The ANC wanted answers from the British government and would approach the department of international relations & co-operation to raise the issue through formal channels.
The South African National Defence Force’s Brigadier General Xolani Mabanga said earlier he was unaware of the claims. If proven true, the SANDF would stay out of it as it was “above party politics”.
The UK’s defence ministry said the visit was “purely academic”.
This was not the first time the ANC had made such allegations.
Last week, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe said former liberation movements had become powerful governments, but had become targets of regime change. He was attending a meeting of former liberation movements in Zimbabwe.
According to eNCA, Mantashe said Western powers wanted to overthrow political authorities considered inconvenient to western interests.
Speaking at an anti-racism march in Pretoria in February, he accused the US embassy of meeting daily to advance regime change in South Africa.
Mantashe accused the embassy of taking people to the US for six weeks and then bringing them back to South Africa and “planting” them on campuses.