Presidential Campaign: Lindiwe Sisulu Promises To Weed Out The 'Corrosive Disease' Of Corruption From ANC

She said the president should face disciplinary action -- but refused to say how she would vote on August 8.

(Reuters and News24) Human Settlements Minister Lindiwe Sisulu launched her bid on Saturday to succeed scandal-hit President Jacob Zuma as ANC president by vowing to help save the ruling party from infighting and corruption.

Sisulu, a veteran cabinet minister who comes from a prominent family in the struggle against apartheid, last week joined the crowded race to replace Zuma in a party leadership contest in December.

The ANC has become increasingly divided over Zuma's leadership following a series of corruption scandals, a much-criticized cabinet reshuffle and a failure to handle an economy that has slipped into recession.

Zuma can remain head of state until an election 2019 but his opponents inside the ANC would like to remove him as president once he steps down as party leader.

Kicking off her campaign at Walter Sisulu Square, Sisulu said the party needed to get back to its roots.

"I would like you to stand with me, because we have to save the ANC. Saving the ANC is to save South Africa," she said in a speech in Kliptown, Soweto.

Sisulu also called for an end to the corruption that has dogged Zuma's government. Media reports about a trove of leaked emails has heaped pressure on him to allow a judicial commission to investigate graft claims. He has denied wrongdoing.

Sisulu also proposed that President Jacob Zuma and others accused of corruption face disciplinary action, reported News24.

She was responding to questions on Saturday on whether she would vote for Zuma to go when the motion of no confidence was heard in Parliament on August 8.

"The reason I am insisting on a disciplinary process is that it allows everybody to explain themselves. If they are indeed innocent they will have the opportunity to indicate that."

Her campaign was themed "It's a must". She promised to save and cleanse the ANC from the ills plaguing it, including corruption, if elected.

She appealed to ANC members and South Africans to support her anti-corruption campaign to replace Zuma as party president when his term ended in December.

"Corruption is a very corrosive disease," she said.

Following disciplinary action, Sisulu said, those found guilty must be kicked out of the 105 year old liberation movement.

Members of the ANC have pushed for Zuma to step down as have alliance partners, the trade union federation Cosatu and the South African Communist Party (SACP).

He also faces a no-confidence motion in parliament on Aug. 8 tabled by Mmusi Maimane, the leader of the main opposition party Democratic Alliance.

With campaigning yet to start, Zuma, has openly backed his ex-wife and former African Union president, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, while Cosatu and the SACP have voiced support for deputy president Cyril Ramaphosa.