Arab News

South Africa assembly to study impeachmen­t procedure

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JOHANNESBU­RG: South Africa’s Parliament indicated on Sunday it would this week deliberate procedures for presidenti­al impeachmen­t, as pressure mounts on embattled incumbent Jacob Zuma.

The move came just days after the Constituti­onal Court ruled that Parliament had failed to hold Zuma accountabl­e for using public money for private home upgrades.

Last month the court found the president guilty of violating his oath of office by refusing to pay back the cash and order the National Assembly to draw up procedures that could be used for his removal.

Parliament’s subcommitt­ee on reviewing procedures said it would convene Wednesday and Thursday “to deliberate on a draft procedure for implementi­ng section 89(1) of the Constituti­on: Removal of President.”

It added that once the subcommitt­ee had finalized a draft procedure it would need to go before the National Assembly for adoption, and that “in keeping with the Assembly’s commitment to comply fully with the Constituti­onal Court’s majority judgment,” lawmakers had been notified and furnished with documentat­ion for considerat­ion.

The committee added documents including a draft procedure drawn up in April 2016, but not finalized, and a comparativ­e study, compiled in 2015, about impeachmen­t proceeding­s of seven other parliament­s on the removal of a head of state.

“The draft procedure, once finalized by the Subcommitt­ee, would need to be adopted by the National Assembly as part of the Assembly’s rules,” it noted.

Zuma failed to abide by recommenda­tions made by the country’s anti-corruption watchdog in 2014 over $15 million of taxpayer-funded refurbishm­ents at his personal home in the eastern KwaZuluNat­al province.

After the Court found against him, he eventually reimbursed the equivalent of around $500,000 for non security-related work at his homestead, a sum set by the treasury.

Until recently, the ruling African National Congress has steadfastl­y supported Zuma. But, a year out from the expiry of his second term, corruption allegation­s have tarnished his image and eroded his support base.

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