The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Ajay Gupta left SA on Dubai-bound flight’

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JOHANNESBU­RG. — Ajay Gupta, one of the three Gupta brothers under investigat­ion over accusation­s of corrupt links to ousted South African president Jacob Zuma, left the country for Dubai 10 days ago, a Johannesbu­rg airport spokeswoma­n said yesterday.

The three Gupta brothers, accused by the public anti-graft watchdog of using their friendship with Zuma to influence policy and amass wealth, have denied any wrongdoing, as has Zuma.

Ajay Gupta was declared “a fugitive from justice” by South Africa’s chief prosecutor earlier this week.

South African police launched a search for Ajay Gupta on Thursday after he failed to report to law enforcemen­t officials investigat­ing alleged high-level influence-peddling in Zuma’s government involving the Gupta brothers.

Leigh Gunkel-Keuler, a spokeswoma­n for Johannesbu­rg’s main airport, said Ajay Gupta was on an Emirates flight bound for Dubai on February 6.

“I cannot confirm if Mr Ajay Gupta is back in the country; he may well be back in the country through another port of entry,” Gunkel-Keuler said.

She added that the airport was handing over all relevant informatio­n to the Hawks, an elite police unit officially known as the Directorat­e for Priority Crime Investigat­ion, which targets organised crime, economic crime and corruption.

Former President Zuma resigned on Wednesday on the demand of the ruling ANC and was replaced on Thursday by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

Eight people, several of whom have worked for Gupta firms, appeared in a South African court on Thursday in connection with an investigat­ion into the siphoning off of millions of dollars of public money from a state-backed dairy farm.

Among the eight were Gupta nephew Varun Gupta, who was an executive director of the Guptas’ Shiva Uranium firm. Zuma’s son Duduzane was a fellow director of Shiva.

Earlier this week, the Hawks raided Gupta properties in Johannesbu­rg in connection with the dairy farm, which prosecutor­s last month called a “scheme designed to defraud and steal”.

President Ramaphosa was yesterday expected to give more details about how he plans to tackle corruption and boost economic growth when he delivered his first state of the nation address. — Reuters.

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