World | Mike Tyson Tyson Stirs Up Storm in S. Africa Pairing of boxer with Jacob Zuma too much for ANC By Jason Farago Posted Feb 1, 2008 12:46 PM CST Copied Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson hugs a pupil during a visit to a school while on a tour of Soweto, South Africa, Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008. (AP Photo/Alon Skuy-Daily Times) (Associated Press) South Africa is caught up in a bitter debate after Jacob Zuma, the ANC head and probable future president, almost appeared publicly with Mike Tyson at a charity event. Women's groups were already unhappy that the convicted rapist was getting a hero's welcome; the prospect of an embrace from Zuma—who was tried for and acquitted of rape charges—was too much. Zuma returned from Davos early to meet “the baddest man on the planet” but pulled out at the last minute, the Mail and Guardian reports. "It may be, and it seems to us, that pressure placed on him in the media may have swayed him," said a women's group leader. Both men are unrepentant about their records: Zuma uses Zulu culture as a defense, and Tyson says it's un-American for guys like him not to get a lot of blow-jobs. Read These Next CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. Camera records 'dirty eruption' at Yellowstone National Park. Feds strike another blow in war on wind turbines. Report an error