JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Lesotho’s Prime Minister Thomas Thabane will leave office on Wednesday, clearing the way for a solution to a political crisis that erupted late last year, he was quoted as saying in an interview with AFP.
His spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. Thabane’s coalition fell apart in parliament on Monday, and he was required to step down by the end of next week to make way for a new government.
The prime minister had been under pressure to resign over a case in which he and his current wife are suspected of conspiring to murder his former wife nearly three years ago. They both deny any involvement.
AFP quoted him as saying he would inform King Letsie III of his intentions in a letter on Wednesday.
Police named Thabane and his current wife, Maesaiah, in the murder case late last year, triggering a political crisis as he came under pressure to step down. He had been resisting it until his coalition collapsed on Monday.
All parties have provisionally agreed on Finance Minister Moeketsi Majoro to replace Thabane.
Members of the ruling All Basotho Convention (ABC) and opposition parties had been heaping pressure on Thabane to step aside, as had Lesotho’s bigger neighbour, South Africa.
Reporting by Tim Cocks; Editing by Chris Reese and Lisa Shumaker
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