Health, legal issues prompt new problems in trial of S.Africa’s Zuma

Author: AFP

The much-postponed corruption trial of South Africa’s ex-president Jacob Zuma ran into fresh legal delays and health problems on Monday as he launched a new procedural battle on the eve of his 80th birthday.

Zuma faces 16 counts of fraud, graft and racketeering over the purchase of fighter jets, patrol boats and equipment while he was vice president in the 1990s.

The closely-followed trial started in May 2021 after repeated postponements as Zuma’s legal team battled to have the charges dropped.

It had been expected to resume on Monday in the southeastern city of Pietermaritzburg.

But Zuma’s attorney said his defendant was unable to attend on health grounds, and then successfully filed a request for a further postponement. “There was a medical emergency which took place in the past few hours,” his lawyer Dali Mpofu announced in court, giving no further details.

His spokesman later said that Zuma had been admitted to hospital for medical tests.

Zuma’s defence asked the High Court to postpone the case to let him exhaust his options of appeal in a complaint against the lead prosecutor, Billy Downer.

In October, Zuma asked for Downer to be dropped from the case, accusing him of bias. He contended Downer leaked confidential documents to the media. But the Supreme Court of Appeal last month ruled against him, saying the petition had “no reasonable prospect of success.”

Downer argued in court on Monday that the application for another postponement was another “delaying tactic.”

It “erodes the public’s confidence in the system of justice because it’s yet another postponement in the long-running series of postponements,” he warned.

Mpofu denied this, saying Zuma “has consistently done everything he can for this trial to proceed.”

Judge Piet Koen granted a postponement to May 17 to let the appeal process “take its due course.” But, he warned, “the future progress of the trial must be managed properly.”

Zuma spokesman Mzwanele Manyi welcomed Koen’s decision as the “upholding of the rule of law.”

“We are very happy that finally the laws of this country are being applied,” Manyi said, adding that Zuma was “not being done any favour, because he is not well”. Details of his illness have not been revealed.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Editorial

Wheat Woes

Months after a witty, holier-than-thou, jack-of-all-trades caretaker government retreated from the executive, repeated horrors from…

1 hour ago
  • Editorial

Modi’s Tricks

For all those hoping to see matured Pak-India relations enter a new chapter of normalisation,…

1 hour ago
  • Cartoons

TODAY’S CARTOON

1 hour ago
  • Op-Ed

Exceptionally Incendiary Rhetoric

Narendra Modi is seeking the premiership of the country for the record third time. The…

1 hour ago
  • Op-Ed

Fading folio, rising screens – II

The ASER 2023 report findings further indicate that the highest level of learning for Urdu…

1 hour ago
  • Op-Ed

Populists and Polarized Democracies – II

Another major theme of the populists' strategy is to deliberately invoke hate and social schism…

1 hour ago