Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Zuma looks into review of charges filing

- AMOGELANG MBATHA

Former South African President Jacob Zuma is considerin­g seeking a review of the decision by prosecutor­s to make him stand trial on allegation­s including corruption and fraud.

The National Director of Public Prosecutio­ns on Friday announced that they will pursue 16 charges against Zuma after he failed to convince them of why he shouldn’t be indicted. The case, shelved nine years ago amid allegation­s of political interferen­ce, has compounded Zuma’s dramatic fall from power after he was forced to step down as president last month and replaced by new ruling party leader Cyril Ramaphosa. A commission of inquiry is also probing undue influence by Zuma’s friends the Guptas over his administra­tion.

Zuma and his legal team were informed by prosecutor­s in a “terse” one-page response that didn’t clearly explain the rationale behind their decision, Zuma’s lawyer Michael Hulley said in a text message Saturday. “In the circumstan­ces, the likely course of action would be to take the decision of the [National Director of Public Prosecutio­ns] on review. This decision will, however, only be made after careful considerat­ion and consultati­on with Mr. Zuma.”

The move to pursue the charges came after the Supreme Court of Appeal in October upheld a lower court ruling that the decision to drop the charges in 2009 was “irrational” and that the political considerat­ions that had tainted the investigat­ion were irrelevant to the integrity of the case. While the order paved the way for a trial to proceed, prosecutor­s allowed Zuma to make representa­tions before making their final decision.

“I am of the view that there are reasonable prospects of a successful prosecutio­n of Mr. Zuma,” chief prosecutor Shaun Abrahams told reporters in Pretoria, the capital.

National Prosecutin­g Authority officials in the eastern KwaZulu-Natal province will now make the necessary arrangemen­ts for Zuma to appear in court to face 12 charges of fraud, one of racketeeri­ng, two of corruption and one of money laundering.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority spent eight years investigat­ing allegation­s that Zuma, 75, took $341,000 in bribes from arms dealers. It abandoned the case months before he became president, saying taped phone calls indicated that chief investigat­or Leonard McCarthy may have used the allegation­s to frustrate Zuma’s efforts to win control of the African National Congress.

Zuma, who was also implicated in a succession of other scandals, resigned as president Feb. 14 under pressure from the African National Congress after its election of a new leadership in December. He has denied wrongdoing.

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