Two weeks after former South African president Thabo Mbeki was forced by his party to resign, his ouster continued to make waves Sunday, with respected Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu threatening to boycott upcoming general elections over the move, according to dpa. "I would be sufficiently unhappy not to vote," the Nobel Peace Prize laureate and renowned anti-apartheid activist told the Sunday Times, South Africa's biggest selling newspaper, in an interview. Mbeki stepped down on September 21 at the demand of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) following a court ruling inferring he meddled in the prosecution of ANC leader Jacob Zuma. ANC deputy leader Kgalema Motlanthe was elected by parliament to succeed Mbeki until general elections slated for April or May. Tutu slammed the party's decision to issue Mbeki with his marching papers six months before the end of his presidency as "unnecessary" and vengeful. The 76-year-old clergyman and former post-Apartheid truth commission chairman said he would not participate in the election unless there were attempts at healing the divisions within the ANC between Zuma and Mbeki loyalists. Although Motlanthe and Zuma have both called for party members to put aside their differences, disgruntled Mbeki loyalists and the pro-Zuma ANC leadership are still at each other's throats.