The Guardian (Nigeria)

Zuma wins court battle to stand election in South Africa

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SOUTH Africa’s former President, Jacob Zuma, is free to run in May’s general election after an electoral court overturned a ban on his candidacy.

Last month the electoral commission barred him over a contempt of court conviction.

It argued the constituti­on prevented people from holding public office if convicted of a crime and sentenced to more than 12 months in prison.

Mr Zuma, 81, has been campaignin­g for the new umkhonto we Sizwe ( MK) party.

A former stalwart of the governing African National Congress ( ANC), he is a controvers­ial figure and served as president from 2009 until 2018, when he had to step down because of corruption allegation­s.

He was sentenced to 15 months in jail in 2021 for failing to testify in a corruption investigat­ion, though he only served three months on health grounds.

The ruling could have a significan­t impact on the outcome of next month’s election.

Mr Zuma is the face of a newly formed MK opposition party, which is named after the ANC’S former military wing.

The ex- president sees himself as the true heir to the revolution­ary roots of ANC, once led by Nelson Mandela. Mr Zuma’s court victory means he can now run as the MK’S leading candidate. Rather than voting directly for a president, South Africans elect members of the National Assembly. The head of whichever party can muster a majority is likely to become the country’s leader, though it could put forward another candidate.

The ruling will also be a blow to the ANC, which after 30 years in power, faces a potentiall­y bruising election. For the first time since the start of the democratic era in 1994, the ANC’S vote share could fall below 50 per cent, several opinion polls predict.

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