Eastern Eye (UK)

Gupta brothers’ arrest hailed in South Africa

SIBLINGS ACCUSED OF ALLEGED STATE CORRUPTION HELD IN DUBAI

- (AFP, Reuters)

TWO wealthy India-born business brothers who were allegedly at the centre of a massive web of state corruption in South Africa have been arrested in Dubai, Pretoria announced on Monday (6).

The detentions came as a probe was concluded into extensive plundering of state institutio­ns during former president Jacob Zuma’s era.

South Africa’s justice ministry “confirms that it has received informatio­n from law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) that fugitives of justice, namely, Rajesh and Atul Gupta have been arrested”, it said in a statement.

The Guptas are at the centre of an allegedly corruption scandal that dogged Zuma’s nine-year administra­tion until 2018.

They were accused of paying bribes in exchange for huge and lucrative state contracts and influence over ministeria­l appointmen­ts.

Their arrests come almost a year after Interpol issued a red notice against them in July last year.

Red notices are a global alert enabling law enforcemen­t to arrest a person sought for prosecutio­n or to serve a custodial sentence and detain them pending extraditio­n.

“Discussion­s between various law enforcemen­t agencies in the UAE and South Africa on the way forward are ongoing,” said the ministry.

South Africa’s largest opposition party welcomed the arrests. “We hope this is indeed the beginning

of arrests and prosecutio­n of those who have – locally and abroad – looted our country for years and are directly responsibl­e for the hardships that millions of South Africans face today,” the Democratic Alliance said in a statement.

The Guptas came to South Africa in 1993 to build a business empire in mining, computer technology and media. They had been granted South African citizenshi­p, but fled the country shortly after a judicial commission probing corruption began in 2018.

After four years of investigat­ions, chief justice Raymond Zondo compiled a report, revealing how the wealthy siblings became enmeshed with the highest levels of government and the ruling African National Congress (ANC).

In a series of reports being published this year, the investigat­ors said procuremen­t contracts as the proprietor of all rail, ports and pipelines amounted to “planned offences of racketeeri­ng activity conducted by a racketeeri­ng enterprise” linked to the Guptas.

The investigat­ors also concluded Zuma “would do anything that the Guptas wanted him to do for them”. Zuma and the Guptas deny any wrongdoing.

The corruption scandals engulfing the former president led to his downfall. He was forced to resign in 2018. Zuma was, last year, jailed for 15 months for refusing to testify before the investigat­ors. He was released on parole, having served just two months of the term.

In July last year, Interpol said the Gupta brothers were being sought for fraud and money laundering in connection with a 25-million rand (£1.3m) contract paid to a Guptalinke­d company, Nulane Investment, to conduct an agricultur­al feasibilit­y study.

Paul Holden, an investigat­or who runs an NGO alongside a former ANC MP, said the cost of the Guptas’ alleged illicit activities in South Africa could be as much as 50-billion rand (£2.6bn).

 ?? ?? INVESTIGAT­ION: Atul Gupta
INVESTIGAT­ION: Atul Gupta

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