Tag: Jacob Zuma

  • South African polling agency denies request to oust Zuma from MK party

    South African polling agency denies request to oust Zuma from MK party


    The South African electoral commission declined a request to oust former President Jacob Zuma as the head of the newly established Umkhonto weSizwe (MK) party.

    The commission’s decision came in response to a letter from MK founder Jabulani Khumalo, who sought Zuma’s removal as the party’s figurehead and from its potential list of parliamentary members.

    Khumalo, recently ousted from the party, alleged fraudulent occupation of leadership by Zuma within the new party and placed him on a precautionary suspension for what he termed “several acts of misconduct.”

    However, in a Tuesday statement, the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) asserted its non-interference in political parties’ internal affairs and affirmed Zuma’s status as a registered leader of the MK party.

    “The commission only acts on the instruction of the registered leader of the party,” the poll agency said, adding that Mr Zuma has remained MK party leader since last month.

    The 82-year-old has successfully resisted efforts to prevent him or his new party from participating in the general election on May 29th.

    On Friday, the Constitutional Court will review an appeal by the IEC regarding Mr. Zuma’s disqualification from running for a parliamentary seat.

    In March, the electoral commission made an unsuccessful attempt to disqualify him due to a contempt of court conviction.

  • South African electoral authority contests decision permitting Zuma’s candidacy

    South African electoral authority contests decision permitting Zuma’s candidacy

    The South African Electoral Commission has taken its case to the country’s Constitutional Court following a recent decision by judges to overturn a ban preventing former President Jacob Zuma from running in the upcoming election.

    The commission had initially disqualified Zuma’s candidacy, citing constitutional provisions that prohibit individuals sentenced to more than 12 months in prison from holding public office.

    Zuma had received a 15-month sentence for contempt of court in 2021, though he served only three months behind bars.

    However, earlier this week, South Africa’s electoral court overturned the ban without providing detailed reasoning for its decision.

    In response, the Electoral Commission has sought legal clarification from the nation’s highest court on this matter. Officials emphasized the significant public interest in obtaining clear guidance on the interpretation of relevant laws.

    The appeal to the Constitutional Court underscores the importance of resolving this issue to ensure transparency and adherence to constitutional principles ahead of the upcoming election.

  • Jacob Zuma goes uninjured in car accident amid allegations of targeted attack

    Jacob Zuma goes uninjured in car accident amid allegations of targeted attack


    South Africa’s ex-President Jacob Zuma was involved in a car accident but fortunately escaped unharmed.

    According to police reports, a drunk driver collided with his “official armoured state vehicle” on Thursday evening.

    However, a prominent member of his uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party alleged that the crash was a deliberate targeting of Zuma.

    Currently suspended by the ruling African National Congress (ANC), Zuma is actively campaigning for the MK ahead of the upcoming general election in May.

    The incident occurred while Mr. Zuma was traveling with his official protection team on a road in his native province of KwaZulu-Natal around 18:40 local time (16:40 GMT) on Thursday.

    “No-one was injured, including members of the Presidential Protection Services. The former president was evacuated and taken to his residence,” a brief police statement said.

    “No injuries were reported, including among members of the Presidential Protection Services. The former president was safely evacuated and transported to his residence,” stated a concise police release.

    Authorities have apprehended a 51-year-old individual for charges related to “drunken driving, as well as reckless and negligent driving.”

  • ANC loses legal battle against Jacob Zuma-backed party in South Africa

    ANC loses legal battle against Jacob Zuma-backed party in South Africa

    The African National Congress (ANC) of South Africa has suffered a setback in its attempt to block a newly established party, supported by former President Jacob Zuma, from participating in the upcoming general election in May.

    The uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party, named after the disbanded armed wing of the ANC, has garnered attention due to Mr. Zuma’s endorsement, potentially impacting the ANC’s electoral fortunes.

    The ANC’s legal challenge, arguing that the MK party failed to meet official registration criteria, was dismissed by the electoral court.

    Following the ruling, jubilant supporters of the MK party, adorned in green attire, celebrated outside the court premises.

    The ANC has expressed its acceptance of the court’s decision and pledged to adhere to it. A party spokesperson clarified that their legal action was not intended to suppress the MK party but rather to ensure compliance with registration laws.

    However, the ANC has initiated separate legal proceedings against the MK party, alleging copyright infringement.

    Amidst the electoral landscape, opinion polls suggest a decline in the ANC’s vote share, potentially dipping below 50% for the first time in thirty years in the upcoming election.

    Mr. Zuma’s support base, particularly in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, poses a challenge to the ANC’s dominance. Despite not founding the MK party, Zuma endorsed it in December, leading to his suspension from the ANC.

    Zuma’s political trajectory from serving in the ANC’s MK to presidency, marred by corruption allegations, underscores the shifting dynamics within South African politics.

  • Former SA leader Zuma uses familiar tactics to stall corruption trial

    Former SA leader Zuma uses familiar tactics to stall corruption trial

    The former president of South Africa Jacob Zuma is 80 years old, and he appears to be relying on familiar tactics to delay his legal proceedings.

    On Thursday, he commenced his trial to face 783 charges related to corruption, fraud, money laundering, and kickbacks in a 1990s arms deal.

    His legal team sought to remove the lead prosecutor, Billy Downer, despite this matter having been settled by higher courts previously.

    With a new judge presiding over the case after the previous judge recused himself in January, the issue of Zuma’s attempt to replace lead prosecutor Billy Downer came up during the Pietermaritzburg High Court session.

    This issue had been previously dismissed, and Zuma’s subsequent appeals had also been unsuccessful.

    Zuma’s team argued that their renewed application to remove Downer, based on allegations of impartiality, was not another instance of Zuma’s well-known “Stalingrad defense,” a strategy of raising multiple legal issues to delay proceedings.

    Zuma’s determination to remove Downer, who had successfully prosecuted Zuma’s friend and former “financial advisor” Shabir Shaik on similar charges in 2006, was supported by Zuma’s claim that he had lodged a “final appeal” with the Constitutional Court challenging earlier rulings that upheld Downer’s right to prosecute.

    Although legal experts view the dispute over Downer’s role as irrelevant to the strength of the state’s case against Zuma, it must be resolved before the actual trial can proceed.

    Zuma had previously attempted to privately prosecute Downer and legal journalist Karyn Maughan for allegedly leaking and publishing his medical condition. The Constitutional Court dismissed this case, ruling it unlawful. Nevertheless, Zuma’s legal team returned to the issue of Downer’s alleged bias.

    For those following Zuma’s legal issues, the renewed effort to remove Downer from the prosecution team appeared reminiscent of arguments made two years ago to the previous trial judge.

    Dali Mpofu, representing the former president, argued that the matter had become “live” again after the Constitutional Court’s involvement, necessitating the new judge’s assessment.

    In response to the repeated arguments against Downer, the state expressed concern about allowing a “festival of Stalingrad tactics,” suggesting Zuma’s intent to oppose every state prosecutor in the future.

    Jacob Zuma, who served as South Africa’s president from 2009 to 2018, has pleaded not guilty to charges of accepting bribes from French defense contractor Thales. These charges date back nearly 25 years and include fraud, corruption, racketeering, and money laundering. If found guilty, he could face a 15-year jail term, similar to that of Shabir Shaik.

  • Jacob Zuma returns from Russian medical trip

    Jacob Zuma returns from Russian medical trip

    Former president of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, has returned from Russia where he was undergoing medical care.

    “The check-up and observations went well,” his foundation said in a statement.

    Following his loss in a case at the Constitutional Court last month, where he attempted to overturn a ruling to return to prison, former South African President Jacob Zuma traveled to Russia.

    The Constitutional Court found that Zuma had been unlawfully granted medical parole.

    The prisons department has now given the 81-year-old until Friday to provide reasons why he should not serve the remainder of his 15-month sentence.

    Zuma was released in September 2021, serving less than eight weeks, after being granted parole by the former head of the prison service, Arthur Fraser, who is considered an ally of Zuma.

    The former president was convicted of contempt for failing to cooperate with an anti-corruption investigation during his time in office.

    Additionally, Zuma faces a separate trial on corruption and fraud charges related to an arms deal in the late 1990s.

    According to the Jacob G Zuma Foundation, his return from Russia was also due to the upcoming private prosecution matter, scheduled to be heard in the Pietermaritzburg High Court on Friday.

  • Former South African President Zuma visits Russia for ‘health reasons’ – Spokesperson

    Former South African President Zuma visits Russia for ‘health reasons’ – Spokesperson

    Former President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, who was removed from office in 2018 due to corruption allegations and faced multiple legal cases, is presently in Moscow for medical treatment, according to his spokesperson. This revelation comes just a day after a court ruling that upheld his imprisonment.

    Mr. Zuma, 81, “went to Russia last week for health reasons and he will return to the country when his doctors have completed his treatment,” Mzwanele Manyi said in a statement.

    This trip, aboard a commercial flight, “is private, but not secret” , defends the spokesperson, in the wake of leaks in the local press on this trip by Mr Zuma, who was still on the 7 July in Zimbabwe , where he represented a group from Belarus at a conference on carbon credits.

    On Thursday, South Africa’s highest court reiterated that Mr Zuma should return to prison to finish serving a 15-month sentence for contempt, rejecting an appeal asking that he be spared.

    This decision should not have immediate effect: the penitentiary services affirmed that they were going to study this judgment and seek a legal opinion before expressing themselves on this file.

    Mr. Zuma was sentenced in June 2021 for stubbornly refusing to respond to a commission investigating corruption under his presidency (2009-2018). His imprisonment a few days later sparked several days of riots, killing more than 350 people.

    He had been released on parole after two months for medical reasons, without further details on his state of health.

    Mr. Zuma, when he was president, had close ties with Moscow. More generally, relations between South Africa and Russia date back to the apartheid era, with the Kremlin providing support to the ANC in the fight against the racist regime.

    Mr. Zuma, feared intelligence chief at the time of the ANC in exile, whose middle name Gedleyihlekisa means in Zulu “he who laughs while crushing his enemies”, spent ten years in Robben Island penitentiary alongside Nelson Mandela.

  • Jacob Zuma goes for medicals in Russia

    Jacob Zuma goes for medicals in Russia

    The foundation of South Africa’s ex-President Jacob Zuma has stated that he is currently in Moscow, the capital of Russia, for reasons related to his health.

    “He will be returning to [South Africa] once his doctors have completed their treatment,” a statement from the Jacob G Zuma foundation continued.

    Zuma departed for Russia on a commercial flight last week, according to Mzwanele Manyi, the spokesperson for his foundation. This is not the first time Zuma has sought medical treatment in Russia, as he previously visited in 2014 after an alleged poisoning incident.

    On Thursday, the Constitutional Court declared that Zuma’s medical parole had been granted unlawfully.

    The parole had been authorized by Arthur Fraser, the former head of the prison service, who is considered an ally of Zuma.

    In September 2021, Zuma was released after serving less than eight weeks of a 15-month prison sentence for contempt of court, stemming from his refusal to cooperate with an anti-corruption investigation during his presidency.

    The Department of Correctional Services has indicated that it is reviewing the Constitutional Court’s ruling and will provide further comments after seeking legal advice.

    The Democratic Alliance (DA), the main opposition party, has expressed support for the court’s decision, asserting that it confirms Zuma’s rightful place in jail.

  • Court rules Zuma’s release from South African jail unlawful

    The South African Constitutional Court has found that former president Jacob Zuma’s medical parole was improperly granted.

    Zuma had been granted parole by Arthur Fraser, a former prison service chief who is thought to be a close ally of the former president.

    After spending less than eight weeks of a 15-month prison term, he was freed in September 2021.

    After refusing to cooperate with an anti-corruption investigation throughout his tenure in government, Zuma was found guilty of contempt.

    He was recently observed in Zimbabwe at a climate conference.

    The prisons department has said it is studying the constitutional court’s judgement and will comment after seeking legal advice.

    This week marks the second anniversary of the deadly riots sparked by Zuma’s arrest. More than 350 people were killed in the violence.

  • Court suspends private prosecution against Ramaphosa

    Court suspends private prosecution against Ramaphosa

    A South African court has put a stop to a private investigation launched by former president Jacob Zuma against President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    To try to put an end to the endeavor, Mr. Ramaphosa had filed a lawsuit.

    Mr. Zuma claims that the president did nothing to stop a journalist and a state prosecutor from illegally leaking his private medical documents.

    http://tigpost.co/ramaphosa-cancels-trip-to-davos-due-to-energy-crisis/

    As a result of the temporary ruling to stop Mr. Ramaphosa’s prosecution, he will no longer appear in court as an accused party.

  • Cyril Ramaphosa, Mandela’s protégé now in scandal

    The South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, who was a favorite of Nelson Mandela and one of the most talented of his generation, has fallen from his pedestal, tainted by a scandal that has plagued him for months.

    A parliamentary commission assured Wednesday that he “may have committed violations and misconduct” in a botched 2020 burglary at one of his properties that revealed a dollar fortune hidden in a sofa.

    Soon, one question loomed large and heady: Can he stay on as a leader? Mr. Ramaphosa promised to address his fellow citizens soon.

    But the road ahead seemed clear. He was expected to be reappointed in December as president of the ruling ANC party and to serve a second term as head of state, but everything froze with the threat of impeachment hanging over his head.

    The plump, round-faced 70-year-old, sometimes mocked for his apparent bonhomie concealing a formidable negotiator, succeeded the sulphurous Jacob Zuma in 2018, making the fight against corruption his hobby horse.

    But a complaint filed in June accuses him of not reporting the burglary at his Phala Phala farm, located two hours north of Pretoria, to either the police or the tax authorities. The case is still under police investigation.

    This scandal, for months, makes “doubt his probity and reminds that he is not a superman”, says the political scientist Susan Booysen, adding that the president had so far forged an image of “icon of the fight” against corruption.

    – From Mandela to Coca-Cola –

    Born on November 17, 1952, in Soweto, the epicenter of the struggle against apartheid near Johannesburg, Mr. Ramaphosa longed for the supreme office before he reached it.

    As a law student, he became an activist in the 1970s and spent eleven months in solitary confinement. He turned to trade unionism, the rare legal way to fight the racist regime. In 1982, he founded the powerful miners’ union, which shook the white power with massive strikes.

    He was at the side of the iconic Mandela when he was released from prison in 1990 and contributed to the democratic transition. He was a candidate for the presidency of the ANC in 1999, but the party caciques preferred him to Thabo Mbeki.

    This father of four then moved away from politics and turned to business. With interests in McDonald’s and Coca-Cola, he amassed millions of thanks to the black economic emancipation program and entered the Forbes ranking of the 50 richest people in Africa.

    He developed a passion for breeding rare cattle, which earned him the nickname “the buffalo”. His wealth has sometimes been a handicap, with his detractors claiming that the businessman came before the politician.

    – Shadow of the picture –

    In 2012, as a director of the mining group Lonmin, he supported a police intervention against striking miners in Marikana. Thirty-four of them were killed in the worst police shooting since apartheid. He was not prosecuted, but even today, some people still hold him responsible.

    But this did not prevent him from returning to politics. First as deputy president of the ANC in 2012, then to President Jacob Zuma in 2014. This will later earn him reproached for his silence during this era of corruption.

    Patient and strategist, he finally took over the leadership of the ANC in 2017. With Zuma ousted the following year, he took the reins of the country.

    He spearheaded the battle for equitable access to vaccines, and his handling of the Covid crisis won international acclaim. But at home, he has faced growing discontent fueled by unemployment and high inequality.

    Cyril Ramaphosa is also struggling to resolve the energy crisis in Africa’s leading industrial powerhouse, which is plagued by chronic power outages.

    Source: African News

  • SA prison service opposes Jacob Zuma’s return to jail

    South Africa’s prison service has said it will challenge a court decision that sent former president Jacob Zuma back to jail.

    “Having carefully studied the judgement, Correctional Services is convinced that another court may arrive at a different conclusion,” the Department of Correctional Services (DCS) said in a statement

    The Supreme Court of Appeal had on Monday ordered Mr Zuma to return to prison after upholding an earlier ruling that his medical parole had been unlawful.

    The 80-year-old was given a 15-month sentence last year for contempt of court over his refusal to testify during an investigation into corruption.

    But he was released after two months in jail, after his lawyers argued that he had an undisclosed terminal illness and needed medical care that could not be provided in prison.

    Source: BBC

  • Former South African President Jacob Zuma has been ordered to return to prison

    South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal has ordered former President Jacob Zuma to return to prison after upholding an earlier ruling that his medical parole had been unlawful.

    But it is not clear if he will spend any more time in jail.

    The 80-year-old was given a 15-month sentence last year for contempt of court over his refusal to testify during an investigation into corruption.

    His imprisonment prompted violent protests in KwaZulu Natal province and other parts of South Africa that left more than 300 people dead.

    Zuma was released after two months in jail, after his lawyers argued that he had an undisclosed terminal illness.

    In their unanimous judgement on Monday, the judges said that prison authorities should decide if the time the former president has unlawfully spent out of prison should count towards his sentence or not.

    The former president’s lawyers had argued that Zuma needed medical care that could not be provided in prison and now may take the matter to the Constitutional Court.

    It’s a legal matter but one that has had political implications in the past. There are some concerns that his return to prison may lead to a repeat of the unrest see

  • Zuma accuses the South African president of “buying” his way into office

    In a new attack on the country’s impending presidential election, Jacob Zuma, the former president of South Africa, charged Cyril Ramaphosa on Sunday with “buying” his position as leader of the governing ANC party. The election is less than a month away.

    The African National Congress (ANC) is due to meet in mid-December to decide whether or not to invest Mr Ramaphosa as a candidate for a second term in the 2024 presidential election by re-electing him as party president.

    “Cyril Ramaphosa has clearly been accused of spending a lot of money to buy his position as ANC president,” Zuma told supporters in Durban. Dancing on stage and chanting “Amandla!” (“Power!”), he accused the current head of state of having “manipulated the democratic process”.

    The financing of Mr Ramaphosa’s campaign for the ANC leadership in 2017 caused controversy. He was accused of lying to parliament about a 500,000 rand (about 28,000 euros) donation from an industrial group.

    Mr Ramaphosa, 69, was finally cleared by the Constitutional Court and took over the reins of the country after the resignation 2018 of Jacob Zuma, mired in scandal.

    Sentenced to 15 months in prison for stubbornly refusing to answer an anti-corruption commission, Mr Zuma, 80, finished serving his sentence last month. He was on conditional release for health reasons.

    His incarceration in July 2021 triggered a wave of deadly violence and looting in a difficult socio-economic context.

    The former president, who remains Cyril Ramaphosa’s biggest political rival, had already made a violent accusation against him last month, accusing him of “treason” and of being “corrupt”.

    Mr Ramaphosa was elected on a promise to eradicate corruption and has been in turmoil for several months. He is the target of an investigation into mysterious cash found during a break-in at one of his properties.

    An independent commission appointed by parliament is due to report back next week. The results of the enquiry could lead to a possible vote in parliament to remove Ramaphosa from office, who has denounced it as a political move.

     

    Source: Africa News

  • Ramaphosa outlines steps to tackle state capture in South Africa

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has addressed the nation detailing the steps his government will be taking in implementing a commission’s report on state capture.

    The six-part report sought to uncover corruption, fraud and the weakening of state institutions under the administration of former president Jacob Zuma.

    State capture describes a form of corruption in which businesses and politicians conspire to influence a country’s decision-making process to advance their own interests.

    In a bold admission, President Ramaphosa accepted the findings by the commission of inquiry led by Judge Raymond Zondo that state capture did happen.

    He announced that the commission made over 300 recommendations, some of which the government was responding to ranging from criminal prosecutions of accused persons, legislative changes, as well the establishment of an anti-corruption commission.

    President Ramaphosa however was thin on detailing how his government would be implementing the commissions findings. No mention was made of members of his cabinet implicated in the report.

    The corruption and fraud uncovered by the state capture report is estimated to have cost the country over $27bn (£24bn).

    Mr Ramaphosa said the stolen money robbed South Africans of their future.

    Source: BBC

  • Zuma released from Correctional Services system

    The Department of Correctional Services says it has released former President Jacob Zuma from its system.

    This comes after the Constitutional Court sentenced him to 15 months imprisonment in its judgment handed down in June 2021.

    Zuma was admitted to the Estcourt Correctional Centre in July of the same year and placed on medical parole in September due to ill health.

    In August, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in Bloemfontein reserved judgment in his medical parole case, after the High Court in Pretoria ordered Zuma to go back to prison after setting aside his medical parole last year.

    In a statement, the department says, “Medical parole placement meant that Mr. Zuma was to serve the remainder of his sentence under Kranskop Community Corrections.

    Essentially, Mr Zuma complied with his conditions of medical parole as set out during his placement. All administrative processes have been concluded and the sentence expiry date marks the end of him serving his sentence under community corrections.”

     

    Source: sabcnews.com

  • Julius Malema: South Africa opposition leader warns of impending uprising

    The controversial South African opposition figure, Julius Malema, has warned of an impending uprising similar to the “Arab Spring” that will target white people and “black elites”.

    “When the unled revolution comes… the first target is going to be white people,” Mr. Malema told the BBC’s Hardtalk program.

    He demanded an “intervention” to boost the quality of life to avoid unrest.

    The MP, known for strident views, has twice been convicted of hate speech.

    He has also faced fraud and corruption charges, which were later dropped. Mr. Malema said they were politically motivated.

    The Arab Spring was a series of pro-democracy uprisings which began at the end of 2010 in Tunisia, where the president was toppled and spread to several other countries in the region.

    In the BBC interview, Mr. Malema accused rich black people of committing “class suicide”.

    “The violence that is going to happen in South Africa is because the elite is disappearing and the poor are becoming poorer,” he told the BBC’s Stephen Sakur.

    “Therefore there’s going to be something that looks like an Arab Spring. That, we are guaranteed.”

    Former President Thabo Mbeki issued a similar warning about a possible uprising last week. He criticized his own party, the governing African National Congress (ANC), saying it has no plan to deal with the problems of poverty, unemployment, and inequality.

    ‘Difficult time for South Africa’

    With high levels of joblessness, inflation hitting a 13-year high, complaints about corruption, and a troubled energy sector, South Africa is facing many challenges.

    Current President Cyril Ramaphosa, in a recent statement to the nation, acknowledged a “difficult time for our country”. But in a separate speech, he responded to Mr. Mbeki’s criticism, saying the ANC has a plan to fix things.

    Mr. Malema, who leads the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), has long courted controversy and has previously been found guilty of using hate speech, in 2010 and 2011 for comments he made about the woman that accused former President Jacob Zuma of rape and then for singing the song “Shoot the Boer (Afrikaner)”.

    In the 2019 general election, the EFF won nearly 11% of the vote and has 44 seats in parliament.

    Supporters of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) political party, sing and dance at the Makwarela stadium in Limpopo on June 16, 2022
    Mr. Malema’s message that the ANC is not working for the poor has gained popularity

    Mr. Malema is currently facing allegations of hate speech against white people but has denied that he is causing tensions between different races and says the violence in South Africa cannot be pinned on his following.

    “I’ve engaged in democratic ways of trying to resolve problems in South Africa, and therefore those who are scared of our ideas try and create an impression of very violent people. We are not.”

    The opposition leader used to be a member of the ANC but was kicked out for fomenting divisions and bringing the party into disrepute. He denied the accusations, saying he was being persecuted.

    Mr. Malema also wants a national shutdown to protest against the ruling ANC.

    “We are going to bring our bodies to the streets and demand that [President] Ramaphosa must resign.

    As for his own party, the EFF, Mr. Malema believes they would govern the country much better than the ANC.

    “There’s going to be the EFF that is going to take over South Africa and run it for the better.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Zuma before commission probing corruption claims

    Former South African president Jacob Zuma on Monday appeared before a state commission investigating serious allegations of corruption during his tenure as head of state between 2009 and 2018.

    It was the first time Zuma had appeared before the judicial inquiry since he abandoned his testimony at the hearing more than a year ago.

    The commission has no powers to prosecute, however other law enforcement agencies may follow up on information revealed at the commission and pursue criminal cases against those implicated.

    Zuma was forced to step down from his position as president in 2018 by his African National Congress party amid allegations of fraud and corruption.

    On Monday he launched an application for the chairman of the commission, Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, to recuse himself from the inquiry, claiming Zondo was biased against him because they used to be close friends.

    Responding during Monday’s proceedings, Zonda admitted to having a “cordial relationship” with Zuma, but said the claim they were friends was “not accurate”.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Former SA president to testify in court over corruption allegations

    Former South African president, Jacob Zuma, was ordered on Friday by a judicial panel to testify next month over allegations of state corruption during his nine years in office.

    The badgered politician is obligated to appear in court before a commission — chaired by deputy chief justice Raymond Zondo and set up in 2018 to hear testimony from ministers, ex-ministers, government officials and business executives on alleged corruption under Zuma’s rule and despite his plea that the judge was biased against him.

    Zuma, who came into power in 2009, was forced to resign in February 2018 over graft scandals linked to a prominent Indian business family, the Guptas, who won lucrative contracts with state companies and were allegedly even able to choose cabinet ministers.

    According to the commission’s advocate Paul Pretorius, Zuma has been directly and indirectly implicated Zuma by at least 34 witnesses thus far.

    “It is important for Mr Zuma to appear before the commission as most of the corruption alleged took place when he was the country’s president,” Pretorius said.

    Zuma has repeatedly refused to testify to the commission, most recently last month when he claimed he was too ill.

    The subpoena came just weeks after the scandal-tainted former president hit out at the commission chairman, requesting that he recuse himself as he was partisan.

    Source: africanews.com

  • South Africa’s Jacob Zuma takes aim in rifle photo

    South Africa’s embattled former President Jacob Zuma has found himself at the centre of fresh controversy after tweeting a photo of himself taking aim with a rifle.

    Its meaning was unambiguous, and provocative.

    A day after he had learned that a judge had issued an arrest warrant for him for failing to appear in court on corruption charges related to a multi-million dollar arms deal, Mr Zuma tweeted a photograph, on his official account, showing him aiming a rifle at an unknown target.

    For a man who uses social media only rarely, and apparently carefully, the implication was clear to all South Africans.

    It was a display of angry defiance against a judiciary and an “elite” which – Mr Zuma and his supporters have argued for years – is biased against him and involved in a dark conspiracy to undermine him and the “radical economic transformation” agenda that he unveiled towards the end of his corruption-riddled presidency.

    ‘Evil white establishment’

    As the photograph provoked furious exchanges on social media, Mr Zuma’s family and his remaining allies in the governing African National Congress (ANC) have rallied to his defence.

    His son Edward claimed the arrest warrant, issued by a judge but suspended until Mr Zuma’s next scheduled court appearance, had somehow been orchestrated by his political enemies.

    Edward Zuma also said the rifle photo was two years old – a claim that hardly seemed relevant in the context in which it was used.

    The head of the ANC’s Women’s League, Bathabile Dlamini, went further, speaking of “an invisible hand” orchestrating a campaign against the former president on behalf of “an evil white establishment”.

    But many South Africans have reacted with contempt, and wry humour, to this latest incident, and see it as part of a decades-long attempt by Mr Zuma to avoid facing trial for alleged corruption by casting himself as a victim, floating frequent conspiracy theories and seeking endless court delays.

    The arrest warrant issued on Tuesday followed Mr Zuma’s failure to show up in court for a fraud and corruption case that dates back to the 1990s.

    The former president’s lawyer produced a doctor’s “sick note” to explain his client’s absence, but the judge questioned the credibility of the document and warned that Mr Zuma would face arrest if he did not appear for his next court appearance in May.

    Mr Zuma has repeatedly insisted that the corruption charges against him are part of a sophisticated western plot against him.

    He has also claimed, with no evidence produced, that those same, unnamed enemies have sought to poison him. It is almost impossible not to see the “rifle” picture in that context.

    ‘Rampant looting’

    But while Mr Zuma still enjoys some limited support in the ANC, and more generally in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, his antics and conspiracy theories are increasingly seen by many as a sign of desperation.

    South Africans have watched, for months, as senior officials have given damning evidence of corruption at a judge-led public inquiry into the Zuma presidency – an era which Mr Zuma’s successor, Cyril Ramaphosa, has since acknowledged was a period of rampant looting by state officials.

    Mr Zuma’s behaviour is also seen here in the context of a “fight-back” by an allegedly corrupt faction within the ANC that lost control of the presidency and fears that, under a revived justice system, some of its most prominent members may soon join Mr Zuma in facing criminal charges.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Jacob Zuma’s first 2020 appearance for corruption trial likely to be postponed

    Former president Jacob Zuma’s corruption case will be heard for the first time in 2020 on Tuesday, but proceedings will likely be quick as he has said he is still sick, according to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA).

    “[It’s] likely a postponement. Mr Zuma indicated he’s not well, but his request to be excused on account of illness is still under consideration by the court,” NPA spokesperson Bulelwa Makeke told News24.

    At his previous appearance, Zuma heard that his appeal for a bid for permanent stay of prosecution had been dismissed with costs.

    Three judges – Jerome Mnguni, Esther Steyn and Thoba Poyo-Dlwati – found that there was no compelling reason why he should be granted leave to appeal the dismissal.

    Their ruling said it was in the “interest of justice and bringing the matter to finality” that no appeal be granted.

    Zuma’s application for a permanent stay of prosecution was based on his long-time allegation that due to an unreasonable delay in the commencement of proceedings, it wouldn’t be possible to receive a fair trial.

    The judges differed saying another court would not find otherwise.

    In his submission, Zuma said the judges overemphasised the seriousness of his alleged crimes. He asserted that the Supreme Court of Appeal would come to a different conclusion.

    Outside court, Zuma, who normally commands a large audience after proceedings in Pietermaritzburg, stood before a paltry group of supporters and passersby.

    Zuma is charged along with French arms company Thales of one count of racketeering, 12 of fraud, four of corruption and one of money laundering.

    Thales’ stay of prosecution application was also denied.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Zuma fails in court challenge over corruption case

    South Africa’s former President Jacob Zuma has failed in his legal attempt to get a decision on whether or not he should face trial for corruption taken to the Supreme Court.

    Last month, the High Court in Pietermaritzburg ruled that he should go on trial on charges relating to an arms deal made in the 1990s.

    Read:Jacob Zuma to face corruption inquiry

    He denies the charges.

    Mr Zuma’s lawyers wanted to challenge that decision saying that the Supreme Court could reach a different decision, but the High Court has just dismissed that attempt.

    Read:Zuma to record anti-apartheid songs for history project

    Source: bbc.com