Jamaica Gleaner

Zuma says he’ll appeal jail term

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IGNORING EFFORTS to defuse a tense stand-off, former South African President Jacob Zuma told hundreds of supporters gathered outside his rural estate that he is appealing his 15-month prison sentence and impending arrest by police.

South Africa’s top court, the Constituti­onal Court, last week sentenced Zuma to prison for defying a court order that he should testify before a commission investigat­ing allegation­s of rampant corruption when he was president from 2009 to 2018. Several witnesses, including former Cabinet ministers and top executives of stateowned corporatio­ns, have testified of Zuma’s wrongdoing, including allowing his associates, the Gupta family, to influence his Cabinet appointmen­ts and lucrative state contracts.

Zuma did not turn himself in to authoritie­s within five days, as the court ruling had ordered, and now faces arrest by police.

Hundreds of Zuma’s supporters, including some who travelled more than 250 miles, gathered outside Zuma’s sprawling Nkandla compound, in rural KwaZulu-Natal province, vowing to prevent any attempts to arrest Zuma.

Top officials of the ruling African National Congress party have gone to KwaZulu-Natal to try to reduce tensions and to encourage Zuma to comply with the court orders and avoid any violent confrontat­ions.

Zuma’s supporters remained defiant on Sunday. Clad in ANC regalia bearing Zuma’s portrait and T-shirts with the question in Zulu, ‘Wenzeni u Zuma?’ (‘What has Zuma done?’), they sang songs praising Zuma as a hero of the 1980s struggle against white minority rule, known as apartheid.

The supporters defied South Africa’s COVID-19 regulation­s, in which wearing masks is compulsory and all social and political gatherings are prohibited.

Addressing his supporters, Zuma reiterated that he is not afraid of being jailed since he had been imprisoned before, being incarcerat­ed by the apartheid regime for 10 years on Robben Island.

“I am not afraid of going to jail. I went to prison fighting for freedom and rights, and it looks like I will have to start from scratch and fight for freedom again,”said Zuma in the Zulu language.

“There is nobody who can come and take these rights away from me just because they think they understand the law. Those I fought for this freedom with would turn in their graves,” said Zuma.

Zuma has launched several court actions to avoid imprisonme­nt. On Friday, he filed an applicatio­n with the Constituti­onal Court to rescind his sentence, which the court will hear on July 12.

 ?? AP ?? Supporters of former President Jacob Zuma descend on his home in Nkandla, KwaZulu Natal Province in South Africa on Saturday.
AP Supporters of former President Jacob Zuma descend on his home in Nkandla, KwaZulu Natal Province in South Africa on Saturday.

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