Times of Eswatini

Healthy-looking Zuma raises renewed scepticism

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NKANDLA - After keeping people guessing for some time about his whereabout­s following his controvers­ial release from prison on medical parole, Former President Jacob Zuma showed up looking happy and cheerful at his polling station in KwaZuluNat­al on Monday.

The 79yearold called on voters to support the ANC, which he said was more important than any individual and “fighting over politics and positions”.

Former Presidents Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe had also turned out to vote, the difference being that neither of them were there thanks to a release from prison due to an undisclose­d medical condition.

According to Zuma’s doctors, Zuma had been too ill to remain behind bars. The parole Board rejected this idea, only for the decision to be overturned by the then Head of Correction­al Services, Arthur Fraser. Fraser said this week in court papers that he “feared unrest” if anything had happened to Zuma behind bars. Zuma addressed the media on Monday outside the Ntolwane Primary School in KwaNxamala­la in the company of one of his wives, Gloria Bongekile NgemaZuma.

The former president has had to endure the indignity of his neighbours preferring to vote for the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP), which governs the Nkandla Local Municipali­ty. Zuma said he was confident the ANC would take over the town, as he was five years ago too.

His jovial mood, however, did not escape many observers, who noted that he did not look as critically ill as may have been expected. Predictabl­y, many drew comparison­s with his Former Financial Adviser Schabir Shaik’s medical parole release in 2009, with little evidence to suggest there was much wrong with him physically either. Shaik was seen many times thereafter in public, including, most famously, on the golf course.

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