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Cyril Ramaphosa sworn in as South Africa’s new president a day after Jacob Zuma resigns

Ramaphosa is South Africa’s fifth president since majority rule started after the end of apartheid in 1994. He was elected after Jacob Zuma resigned as president of South Africa on Wednesday.

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Cyril Ramaphosa was the only candidate nominated for election in the parliament after two opposition parties said they would not participate.


CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA—Cyril Ramaphosa became South Africa’s president with a message of clean government and inclusiveness on Thursday, stirring the hopes of many South Africans that he can reverse a corrosive period of decline and division under his predecessor, Jacob Zuma.

Ramaphosa, a lead negotiator in the transition from apartheid to democracy in the early 1990s, was elected by jubilant ruling party legislators anxious to shed political limbo and get the leadership of the country back on track. In an indication of the challenges facing Ramaphosa, the two main opposition parties did not participate in the National Assembly vote, arguing it was a sham process because the ruling African National Congress party was tainted by its association with corruption scandals during the Zuma era.

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