The Guardian (Nigeria)

South Africa: Zuma corruption trial resumes after deadly unrest

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THE long- running corruption trial of South Africa’s former President, Jacob Zuma, whose imprisonme­nt on a separate charge sparked days of deadly unrests and looting across the country, has resumed.

Zuma appeared virtually in the Pietermari­tzburg High Court yesterday, where he faces 16 charges of fraud, corruption and racketeeri­ng related to the 1999 purchase of fighter jets, patrol boats and military gear from five European arms firms when he was deputy president.

The 79- year- old is accused of taking bribes from one of the firms, French defence giant Thales, which has been charged with corruption and money laundering.

The trial began in May but has faced several postponeme­nts and delays as Zuma’s legal team sought to have charges dropped.

Yesterday, the former president’s legal team petitioned for the trial to again be delayed, arguing a defendant has a right to appear in court in person. Zuma had previously physically appeared in court during the opening of the trial to proclaim his innocence.

On June 29, the former president was found guilty of contempt of South Africa’s top court for disobeying a Constituti­onal Court order to testify before a judicial panel conducting a separate probe of corruption during his presidency.

His imprisonme­nt a week later sparked widespread violent protests, looting and arson in his home province of Kwazulu- Natal as well as Gauteng province that has left commercial areas ransacked and at least 200 people dead.

Yesterday, armoured vehicles and heavily armed soldiers and police were stationed outside the court amid fears the resumption of the trial would spark further violent protests, which had eased over the weekend.

“It was feared or thought that Zuma’s supporters would use this hearing today as an opportunit­y to show their support for the former president,” Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith reported from Pietermari­tzburg.

“That’s why there’s a very heavy police and military presence. A park where they normally gather has actually also been sealed off.”

Still, Smith reported, there was little in the way of demonstrat­ions as the proceeding­s began.

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