The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Zuma could be free in four months

- WENDELL ROELF AND TIM COCKS

JOHANNESBU­RG — South Africa’s former president Jacob Zuma, who has been in police detention since Wednesday night as he starts a 15-month prison sentence for contempt, will be eligible for parole after around four months, the justice minister said.

Zuma turned himself in to police overnight to begin his jail term for defying a court order to give evidence at an inquiry into corruption while he was in power from 2009 to 2018. The inquiry is led by Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo.

The ability of authoritie­s to bring Zuma to book has been seen as a major test of the rule of law in post-apartheid South Africa, and experts said the former president’s legal options for avoiding jail were fast running out.

Zuma will be held in isolation for 14 days in line with COVID-19 protocols, Justice Minister Ronald Lamola said on Thursday, outside Estcourt Correction­al Centre, eastern South Africa, where Zuma was being held.

“This is not a moment of celebratio­n or triumphali­sm, it is a moment of restraint and to be human,” he said, promising to treat Zuma like any other inmate.

Zuma, 79, has already launched legal challenges against his sentence, asking the court to cancel it on a number of grounds, including that he has been unfairly treated and that he might catch and die from COVID19 in jail.

“There are no grounds for such an applicatio­n,” Lawson Naidoo, executive secretary of the Council for the Advancemen­t of the South African Constituti­on, told Reuters by telephone.

Zuma’s efforts would only work, he said, “if there was an obvious error of fact in the judgment which is not the case (or) the applicant did not participat­e through no fault of their own, and in this case Mr. Zuma deliberate­ly opted not to,” Naidoo said.

The court will hear his applicatio­n on Monday.

Zuma denies there was widespread corruption and had thus far not cooperated with the legal process against him, maintainin­g that he was the victim of a political witchhunt.

But the ex-leader’s predicamen­t represents a significan­t fall for one of the leading figures of the ruling African National Congress (ANC), which struggled against white minority rule to establish equality before the law for all citizens.

Zuma’s alleged tendency to flout that very law since becoming one of the ANC’s most powerful politician­s alarmed many of his former comrades and triggered several court cases against him.

The Zondo Commission is examining allegation­s that he allowed three Indian-born businessme­n, Atul, Ajay and Rajesh Gupta, to plunder state resources and traffic influence over government policy.

He and the Gupta brothers, who fled to Dubai after Zuma was ousted, deny any wrongdoing.

Zuma also faces a separate case relating to a US$2-billion arms deal in 1999 when he was deputy president. He denies the charges.

Though he did eventually turn himself in, Zuma initially showed no signs of willingnes­s to obey the courts, holing himself up in his home in the town of Nkandla surrounded by supporters.

 ?? Former South African President Jacob Zuma. ROGAN WARD • REUTERS FILE PHOTO ??
Former South African President Jacob Zuma. ROGAN WARD • REUTERS FILE PHOTO

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