South Africa: ANC chief whip urges Jacob Zuma to quit Published duration 23 October 2016

image copyright Getty Images image caption "The entire ANC leadership ... must take the fall", Jackson Mthembu said.

The chief whip of South Africa's governing political party has called on its entire leadership - including President Jacob Zuma - to step down.

Jackson Mthembu said fraud charges against the finance minister, Pravin Gordhan, were politically motivated.

He said the current government was worse than the apartheid state.

The ANC, which liberated South Africa from white minority rule in 1994, suffered its worst ever electoral performance in August.

Mr Mthembu said he excluded no-one in the leadership from his call for resignations - not even himself.

"President Jacob Zuma is the president of the ANC (African National Congress)," he told ENCA television.

"When I said the entire ANC leadership that has already taken collective responsibility must take the fall, I meant everybody, myself included, including President Zuma."

Quizzed by local journalists on the comparison to the apartheid state, he said it had also used "state instruments" to suppress the people.

However, he said even the apartheid regime "never pursued its own ministers".

"Perhaps we are not the leadership that can take the ANC forward under these conditions," he said.

image copyright AFP image caption Mr Gordhan is at the centre of the political row

Since taking office, Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has attempted to distance himself from Mr Zuma's business allies.

However, he is now facing allegations of misconduct from when he was in charge of the tax collection service a decade ago.

The fraud charges relate to alleged severance payments made to two senior executives at the South African Revenue Service (SARS).

Mr Gordhan is also supported by the party's deputy president, Cyril Ramaphosa.

There have been growing rifts within the ANC in recent months.

In the August elections, the party suffered its worst results since the election of Nelson Mandela in 1994, losing several key battlegrounds