South African
police prevented the country's main opposition leader from using a
public road leading to President Jacob Zuma's house in his home village
on Sunday, citing safety concerns.
South African
media have reported the government plans to spend some 250 million rand
on President Jacob Zuma's home village, angering the opposition
Democratic Alliance (DA) which had wanted to deliver letters from school
children who lack textbooks, to illustrate where money should be spent.
Police in riot
gear turned back DA leader Helen Zille and a small group of supporters
on their way to inspect Zuma's residence in the village of Nkandla, in
KwaZulu-Natal province.
"We will not
allow the ANC to declare certain areas "no-go zones" in our country,"
Zille said in a statement after filing a complaint against Zuma's ruling
African National Congress for blocking a public road.
The ruling ANC,
which has been in power since the end of white minority rule in 1994,
is often accused of corruption by opposition parties such as the DA,
with funds from the national budget not always reaching the intended
millions who continue to live in poverty 18 years after the advent of
democracy.
But Nelson
Mandela's 100 year-old party continues to enjoy mass support, securing
more than 60 percent of the vote in all four national elections since
1994.
Police said
they could not allow Zille to pass on Sunday due to concerns for her own
safety as there were angry ANC members waiting for her next to Zuma's
home.
Zille's DA has
its origins as the liberal, anti-apartheid party among whites before
1994, but has started to make inroads with the electorate, growing to 24
percent of the vote in local elections in May this year and becoming
the main opposition party.
The DA said it
would give Zuma's administration 72 hours to release information on the
funding of the projects in Nkandla before going to court. The
president's spokesman responded by saying Zille was "just looking for
publicity."
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