South African President Jacob Zuma. AFP PHOTO
By AFP
In Summary
- South African state prosecutors will Monday respond to a court ruling that President Jacob Zuma should face almost 800 corruption charges, in a move that could threaten his hold on power.
- The South African leader has endured months of criticism and growing calls for him to step down after a series of corruption scandals amid falling economic growth and record unemployment.
- Pressure on the president would increase if some or all of the 783 charges — which relate to alleged corruption, racketeering, fraud and money laundering — were reinstated.
South African state prosecutors will Monday respond to a
court ruling that President Jacob Zuma should face almost 800 corruption
charges, in a move that could threaten his hold on power.
The charges, relating to a multibillion-dollar arms deal, were
dropped in 2009, clearing the way for the leader to be elected president
just weeks later.
The prosecutor justified dropping the charges by saying that
tapped phone calls between officials in then-president Thabo Mbeki's
administration showed political interference in the case.
But a court last month dismissed the decision to discontinue the charges as "irrational" and said it should be reviewed.
The South African leader has endured months of criticism and
growing calls for him to step down after a series of corruption scandals
amid falling economic growth and record unemployment.
Pressure on the president would increase if some or all of the
783 charges — which relate to alleged corruption, racketeering, fraud
and money laundering — were reinstated.
"Zuma might remain in office while any prosecution was going on,
which would undermine his role as president," Shadrack Gutto, professor
for African Renaissance Studies at the University of South Africa
(Unisa), told AFP.
"Any charges would add pressure for him to step aside."
"Any charges would add pressure for him to step aside."
The ruling African National Congress (ANC) party faces tricky
local elections in August, but Zuma retains widespread support within
the party and has appointed many loyalists to key positions countrywide.
Last month, a commission that Zuma set up cleared all government
officials — including himself — of corruption over the 1999 arms deal.
He was accused of having accepted bribes from international arms manufacturers.
He was accused of having accepted bribes from international arms manufacturers.
The tapped phone recordings, which became known as the "spy
tapes", were kept secret until they were released in 2014 after a long
legal battle fought by the main opposition party, the Democratic
Alliance (DA).
The DA hopes to make major gains in the August elections,
tapping into discontent over the ANC's struggle to deliver jobs, houses
and education 22 years since the end of apartheid rule.
In March, the president lost another major legal case when the
country's highest court found he violated the constitution over the use
of public funds to upgrade his private residence.
The so-called "security" work, which cost taxpayers $24 million,
included a swimming pool, chicken run, cattle enclosure and an
amphitheatre.
President Zuma, 74, will have completed two terms in 2019 and is
not eligible to run for president again, but the ANC could replace him
ahead of the next general election.
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) had until Monday to
announce its decision after the Pretoria High Court ruling last month.A NPA spokesman said a press conference would be held at 10:00 AM
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