The Citizen (KZN)

Nuclear deal is JZ’s top priority – shock report

- Yadhana Jadoo

A damning academic report into state capture has said one of President Jacob Zuma’s top priorities was to ensure that the highly contested nuclear deal is finalised with the Russians – and this would signify “the final consolidat­ion” of his “rent-seeking system”.

The consolidat­ion of a rent-seeking system is seen as the glue that binds constituti­onal and shadow states.

“Ignoring for the moment the obviously important issues that this [nuclear] is the most expensive form of power available, it is unaffordab­le now and will be more unaffordab­le when built due to inevitable budget overruns, as is normal in all Russian nuclear projects,” the report states.

“[A]nd the procuremen­t process has been illegal[…] what matters is that the nuclear deal has emerged from the depths of the shadow state system.”

The report released this week by academics at some of South Africa’s top universiti­es – entitled “Betrayal of the Promise: How South Africa is Being Stolen” – exposes the country as a shadow state which has experience­d a “silent coup” by an “underestim­ated” Zuma.

“The Guptas bought their uranium mine because they assumed the nuclear deal would be done, and there is evidence that Russian intelligen­ce has a presence in the presidency to guide the process.

“To ensure effective support for the nuclear deal, intelligen­ce capabiliti­es have been boosted that are now interfaced with the Gupta networks that brokered the shadow state transactio­ns, to pave the way for the nuclear deal,” the report says.

According to the report, there are further allegation­s that “one set of transactio­ns involved Russian funding for the local government elections which may explain where the ANC managed to find R1 billion for this campaign”.

“It is reasonable to assume that the Russians have linked the approval of the nuclear deal to major investment initiative­s in the future that could be useful for shoring up support of black business,” the group of academics have said.

“It is arguable, therefore, that alternativ­e energy futures are at the heart of the South African political crisis,” the report states.

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