The Phnom Penh Post

Pressure on Zuma after report

- Susan Njanji

SOUTH Africa’s anti-corruption watchdog yesterday called for prosecutor­s to investigat­e alleged criminal activity as it released a report into President Jacob Zuma that fuelled further calls for him to resign.

Zuma, whose presidency has been engulfed by multiple scandals, had fought to block the release of the Public Protector’s report, but his lawyers made a surprise U-turn and dropped their legal appeal.

The report was released hours later, further underminin­g Zuma after a series of court rulings that have tarnished his time in office and the ruling ANC party that led the fight to end apartheid rule.

The investigat­ion probed accusation­s that Zuma allowed the Guptas, a wealthy Indian business family, to have undue influence over government, including letting them choose some cabinet ministers.

Among findings in the 355page report – titled State of Capture and illustrate­d on its front page with a hand strung with puppet wires – was telephone evidence that David van Rooyen visited the Johannesbu­rg neighbourh­ood where the Guptas live on the day before he was appointed finance minister.

Van Rooyen, a little-known Zuma loyalist, was removed as finance minister only four days after his appointmen­t – but not before it had triggered a market plunge, investor panic and political outrage.

The Public Protector said it “brings to the notice of the National Prosecutin­g Authority . . . those matters identified in this report where it appears crimes have been committed”.

It raised several allegation­s that Zuma had broken the Executive Members’ Ethics Act in his relationsh­ip with the Guptas and by failing “to select and appoint ministers lawfully”.

The report was published as thousands of people took to the streets in Pretoria to demand that Zuma resign. Police fired rubber bullets and water cannon to disperse supporters of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party who tried to storm Zuma’s office in the city.

Former public protector Thuli Madonsela concluded her report into the influence of the Gupta family last month, shortly before the expiry of her seven-year term.

“Today is a historic day . . . Jacob Zuma must be held accountabl­e,” Mmusi Maimane, leader of the main opposition Democratic Alliance party, told reporters.

The president, 74, has survived a string of damaging con- troversies, but faces increasing criticism as the economy stalls and after ANC suffered unpreceden­ted losses in local polls.

Some factions of the ANC, former anti-apartheid activists, trade unions and business leaders have all recently called for Zuma to stand down before his term ends in 2019.

“I spent the whole night here,” Dominic Khulube, 30, an unemployed man from Tembisa, a township outside Johannesbu­rg, told AFP after a vigil by the leftist EFF in Pretoria. “Zuma must step down and the Guptas must leave the country.”

The marches were originally planned to show support for Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, who had been due in court yesterday on separate graft charges that many analysts see as an attempt by Zuma loyalists to oust him.

But prosecutor­s dropped the charges on Monday.

“The report contains a lot of explosive, damaging informatio­n about the president,” Mcebisi Ndletyana, politics professor at Johannesbu­rg University, told AFP. “The calls for him to step down after this damaging evidence will grow louder, and there will be a very big fight within the ANC.”

 ?? GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/AFP ?? Garbage burns in the road during a demonstrat­ion in Pretoria yesterday by members and supporters of South African opposition party against South African president Jacob Zuma.
GIANLUIGI GUERCIA/AFP Garbage burns in the road during a demonstrat­ion in Pretoria yesterday by members and supporters of South African opposition party against South African president Jacob Zuma.

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