BFF-36 Zuma could face jail after snubbing S.African anti-graft panel

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Zuma could face jail after snubbing S.African anti-graft panel

JOHANNESBURG, Feb 15, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – The chair of a South African
judicial panel investigating mass state corruption said Monday he would seek
jail time for embattled former president Jacob Zuma over contempt of court
after he again failed to appear before the commission.

The 79-year-old Zuma, who has snubbed previous summonses by the commission,
refused to comply with a Constitutional Court order for him to appear on
Monday before the panel probing graft during his nine-year tenure.

The commission’s chair, deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, vowed to seek
to have Zuma charged with contempt of court.

“The commission will approach the Constitutional Court and ask it to impose
a term of imprisonment on Mr Zuma if it finds that he is guilty of contempt
of court,” Zondo said.

The court in January ruled that Zuma had no right to remain silent during
the proceedings.

The ex-president accused the commission of bias and demanded that Zondo
recuse himself.

In a letter on Monday, Zuma’s lawyers said their client “would not be
appearing before the commission” which had set aside February 15 to 19 for
his testimony.

Zuma, who had approached the High Court to examine Zondo’s refusal to step
aside, argued that appearing before Zondo would “undermine and invalidate the
review application”.

Zondo dismissed Zuma’s argument, saying the apex court’s decision was
supreme and that he would seek to have him charged with contempt of court.

– ‘Right to silence’ –

In the two-page “matter of courtesy” letter, Zuma’s lawyers concluded that
his refusal to testify should not be “construed to suggest any defiance of a
legal process.”

But the commission’s advocate Paul Pretorius said it was in the public
interest for Zuma to testify because he was president at the time of the
alleged state corruption.

Zuma has been implicated in evidence from some 40 witnesses, to which he is
expected to respond.

“Mr Zuma, perhaps more than anyone else is able to assist the commission in
understanding what happened in the period under review,” Pretorius said.

“Its difficult to understand why he would need to rely on a right to
silence.”

Zuma’s refusal came a day after the ruling African National Congress
stressed the need for all its members to cooperate with the commission.

“To allow anything else would lead to anarchy and open the floodgates
easily for counter-revolution,” the ANC said in a statement on Sunday.

Meanwhile local media showed images of dozens of people, some wearing
military regalia and ANC party gear, staging a vigil in support of Zuma
outside his rural homestead in Nkandla in southern Kwa-Zulu Natal province

The group chanted and performed the “toyi-toyi” dance, a protest move
synonymous with the struggle against apartheid.

Zuma, who came to power in 2009, was forced to resign in 2018 over graft
scandals involving an Indian business family, the Guptas, who won lucrative
contracts with state companies and were allegedly even able to choose cabinet
ministers.

He set up the commission shortly before his ouster and only testified
before it once in July 2019, but staged a walkout days later.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 2012 hrs