Deutsche Welle (English edition)

South Africa: Zuma lawyers try to delay new corruption trial

The state accuses Zuma of bribery, fraud and money laundering in a $2 billion weapons contract with French company Thales in the late 1990s. He denies all the charges.

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Lawyers for South African former President Jacob Zuma asked for a corruption case to be postponed Monday so he could get a "fair trial" in court, afterprote­sts over his arrest for another case caused havoc last week.

This latest case accuses the former South African leader of receiving bribes from French arms producer Thales in the late 1990s.

Zuma is taking part in the trial from prison after handing himself in on July 7 to serve a 15month sentence for contempt of court in a separate corruption probe.

Tense atmosphere major unrest

after

Protests turned to riots and widespread looting in the KwaZulu-Natal and Johannesbu­rg regions during the last attempts to try Zuma. They were only quelled when President Cyril Ramaphosa sent25,000 soldiers to those areas.

Ramaphosa believes Zumaꞌs supporters orchestrat­ed some of

the worst unrest in the post apartheid era. More than 200 people were killed and more than 2,500 were arrested.

However, while the protests were widely thought to be at least partially connected to Zuma's trial, public dissatisfa­ction with rising unemployme­nt and COVID-related economic fallout is also high.

The South African authoritie­s deployed forces again during Monday morningꞌs case. Armored cars patrolled the entrance to the Pietermari­tzburg court in case violence flared again, although no incidents were reported.

Defendant addresses court remotely from prison

State prosecutor­s at Pietermari­tzburg court in KwaZulu-Natal allege that Zuma received bribes, committed fraud and was involved in money laundering as part of a $2 billion weapons contract with French company Thales in the late 1990s.

Zuma has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

On Monday, Zumaꞌs lawyers used what prosecutor­s called the Stalingrad defense to try to postpone the case further by saying he could only receive a fair trial if he was physically present.

Zuma is answering to the charges virtually from Estcourt

prison.

The judge on the case, Piet Koen, adjourned the hearing until Tuesday at 10am (UTC+2).

So far, the man who was president from 2009 to 2018 claims the charges are part of a political vendetta against him.

Zuma, who still has widespread support in the country, handed himself in on July 7 to serve a sentence for contempt of court handed down after he declined to testify in another corruption case involving his alleged dealings with the Gupta brothers.

jc/msh (Reuters,

 ??  ?? Protests over Jacob Zuma's arrest caused chaos in South Africa
Protests over Jacob Zuma's arrest caused chaos in South Africa
 ??  ?? South African former President Jacob Zuma denies corruption charges against him
South African former President Jacob Zuma denies corruption charges against him

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