Sowetan

Shaik’s decade beyond prison bars

His doctor stands by his diagnosis

- By Jeff Wicks

In defiance of medical convention and against the best prediction­s of a team of doctors, convicted fraudster Schabir Shaik has survived a decade since his release from prison on medical parole.

Both Shaik and his doctor insisted to sister publicatio­n, Times Select, that the correct medical decision was taken at the time.

It was a sunny March day in 2009 when Shaik – former financial advisor and close aid to erstwhile President Jacob Zuma – was quietly moved by ambulance from the Durban’s specialist Nkosi Albert Luthuli Central Hospital to his home, set in the leafy green suburb of Musgrave on the city’s ridge.

Since his release, the quiet cosmopole has been spotted at restaurant­s and coffee shops and even hit the links at the Papwa Sewgolum Golf Course in Reservoir Hills, all while facing the ticking clock of terminal illness.

When he was contacted last week, he said his blood pressure issues still plagued him. “Today I am not well at all… my blood pressure you know... I can’t talk now actually because I am very sick,” he said while coughing.

He abruptly ended the call, and later apologised that his ill health had cut short an interview about his decade beyond the prison bars.

Shaik’s proximity to the former president was no secret, with Zuma often referring to him as a “brother”. Shaik had, according to a forensic report which formed the cornerston­e of the state’s case when they first pursued Zuma in 2007, managed all facets of the then deputy president’s financial affairs. This included paying hospital bills‚ debts‚ rent‚ vehicles‚ bonds‚ traffic fines‚ wives‚ school fees‚ kids’ pocket money and ANC membership. Even a R10 car wash and vacuum, according to a forensic audit done by KPMG. Zuma had, the state held, used his position in government to further the business interests of Shaik and French arms firm Thint, in exchange for money.

The document showed Shaik’s astonishin­g largesse‚ as he funnelled R4,072,499 to Zuma in 783 separate payments between October 25 1995 and July 1 2005. According to a spreadshee­t in the KPMG report: “Shaik paid Zuma’s family travel and accommodat­ion costs‚ including plane charter [R14,200]‚ the bill for Cape Town’s exclusive Twelve Apostles Hotel‚ car rental costs and air tickets. He also paid R44,100 for “Zuma family travel costs” for a trip to Cuba [tickets and allowance] on December 13 2002.

The charges would eventually be thrown out of court and Zuma ascended to the throne of the ruling party.

But for Shaik’s role, he was convicted on graft charges and sentenced to fifteen years behind bars, but would only serve 28 months, most of which were spent in the hospital suits of Netcare St Augustine Hospital and Nkosi Albert Luthuli.

His protracted hospital stays formed the basis for a recommenda­tion that he be released on medical parole, a clause in SA’s penal system which allows terminally ill prisoners to see out their twilight days with their families.

When his applicatio­n was being considered, his doctors told the parole board that he was in “the final phase of a terminal disease”.

They held he was also clinically depressed‚ losing his eyesight‚ had suffered a stroke‚ and would die from “severe” high blood pressure.

In a 2008 report, Professor DP Naidoo told the head of Durban’s Westville Prison that Shaik could “not be kept in hospital indefinite­ly”. “Since the prison authoritie­s are reluctant to manage him at the prison hospital, where conditions are sub-optimal, we recommend that he be considered for medical parole.” But a decade after Shaik’s liberation, Naidoo remains steadfast in his diagnosis. “I don’t like to speak about this, but what I can say is that I stand by my recommenda­tion.” He would not be drawn to comment on whether his recommenda­tion, and Shaik’s shock triumph over terminal illness, had been a blight on his medical career.

‘‘ I don’t like to speak about this, but I stand by my recommenda­tion

 ?? /AFP/RAJESH JANTILAL ?? Inkatha Freedom Party leader Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, SA’s fourth-largest opposition party, waves to the crowd on his arrival at the party manifesto launch at Chatsworth Stadium in Durban yesterday.
/AFP/RAJESH JANTILAL Inkatha Freedom Party leader Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, SA’s fourth-largest opposition party, waves to the crowd on his arrival at the party manifesto launch at Chatsworth Stadium in Durban yesterday.

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