Bangkok Post

Ex-president Zuma faces graft trial

- BLOOMBERG

JOHANNESBU­RG: Former South African President Jacob Zuma is scheduled to appear in court to face corruption charges just two months after being ousted by his own party.

The trial marks a dramatic turnaround in South Africa where Zuma held a tight grip on power for almost a decade before his former deputy, Cyril Ramaphosa, won the leadership of the ruling African National Congress in December and took over as president in February.

Police erected barricades as groups of Mr Zuma’s supporters began arriving early yesterday outside the court in Durban, in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, defying ANC orders not to wear party regalia.

Mr Zuma, 75, will face 16 charges ranging from corruption to racketeeri­ng related to bribes he allegedly took from arms dealers. Officially, the ANC, the Communist Party and main labor unions, which had catapulted him to power, aren’t backing him.

“President Jacob Zuma over the last nine years, despite some of his achievemen­ts, has been a tornado that wreaked havoc in the economy of this country,” said Sizwe Pamla, a spokesman for the 1.9 millionmem­ber Congress of South African Trade Unions, a close ally of the ANC.

“We are still dealing with the damage and picking up the pieces.”

The trial comes as Mr Ramaphosa has embarked on a campaign to remove Zumaappoin­ted executives from state-owned companies and clean up the ANC, which had backed Mr Zuma’s administra­tion in the face of a series of scandals.

Under Mr Zuma, “state capture” entered the national lexicon as a way to describe the alleged influence wielded over his government by his friends, the Gupta family, which has done business with his son, Duduzane.

The Guptas and Mr Zuma deny any wrongdoing.

As criticism of Mr Zuma’s administra­tion intensifie­d in recent years, the ANC saw its electoral fortunes wane. While it has won outright majorities in every election held since it took power in the first multiracia­l contest in 1994, it lost control of several cities, including the economic hub Johannesbu­rg, in a 2016 municipal vote. National elections are due to take place around the middle of next year.

The move to pursue the charges against Mr Zuma came after the Supreme Court of Appeal in October upheld a lower court ruling that the decision to drop the charges in 2009 was “irrational” and that the political considerat­ions that had tainted the investigat­ion were irrelevant to the integrity of the case.

Last month the head of the National Prosecutin­g Authority, Shaun Abrahams, said the case would go ahead and he was confident that “there are reasonable prospects of a successful prosecutio­n”.

Mr Zuma’s lawyers will ask for a postponeme­nt of the trial so they can challenge Mr Abrahams’s decision to proceed with the case, Business Day reported on Thursday, citing Michael Hulley, his lawyer. Mr Hulley didn’t immediatel­y answer calls seeking comment.

The former president is also counting on backers to come out in protest against the trial since he still enjoys significan­t support in KwaZulu-Natal.

The ANC is divided following Mr Ramaphosa’s slim victory in the party leadership election over Mr Zuma’s preferred candidate and ex-wife, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma.

“Zuma will undoubtedl­y use the court appearance as a public relations and political mobilizati­on exercise,” independen­t political analyst Melanie Verwoerd said by phone from Cape Town. “This will be part of a strategy to bring pressure on the NPA to drop the case against him.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Supporters of former South African president Jacob Zuma wait outside the high court in Durban yesterday.
REUTERS Supporters of former South African president Jacob Zuma wait outside the high court in Durban yesterday.

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