
A former South African president, Jacob Zuma, appeared in court on
Friday to face corruption charges relating to a $2.5 billion arms deal.
The 75-year-old, whose scandal-plagued nine years in office were
marked by economic stagnation and credit downgrades, faces 16 charges
including fraud, racketeering and money laundering.
Mr Zuma denies any wrongdoing and is challenging the decision to
prosecute the case, a dramatic development on a continent where
political leaders are rarely held to account for their actions before
the law.
Wearing a dark suit, a smiling Mr Zuma waved to crowds of supporters
and reporters as he mounted the steps of the High Court in Durban
shortly before 0700 GMT.
The speed with which prosecutors have booked his day in court is a
sign of the loss of control Mr Zuma has suffered since his successor,
Cyril Ramaphosa, became head of the ruling African National Congress
(ANC) in December.
However, Mr Zuma still retains some popular support, especially in
his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, where the case is being heard.
Heavily armed police in riot gear lined the square outside the court,
as thousands of Mr Zuma’s supporters gathered to express solidarity
with a leader they say is the victim of a politically motivated
witchhunt.
Marchers, many clad in the distinctive yellow, green and black of the
ANC, carried placards reading “Hands off Zuma” and performed the
high-stepping toyi-toyi protest dance made popular in South Africa’s
decades-long struggle against apartheid.
Businessman Siya Khoza said he admired Mr Zuma’s determination to
bring in economic policies that he said were designed to spread the
wealth in what remains one of the world’s most unequal societies.
“Whatever happens we will still support Zuma because we believe he
brought us radical economic transformation and we still believe that him
being in the ANC he will push for it,” said Khoza, wearing a waistcoat
emblazoned in ANC colors.
Mr Zuma’ son, Edward, told supporters at nearby park where several
thousand people held an overnight vigil that his father was not worried.
“I would want to believe that as an innocent man, he is definitely
not worried,” the domestic News24 agency quoted Edward Zuma as saying.
Mr Zuma, who was forced to resign by the ANC last month, was at the
center of a 1990s deal to buy billions of dollars of European military
hardware to upgrade South Africa’s post-apartheid armed forces.
The deal was mired in scandal and controversy from the start, with
many inside and outside the ANC questioning the spending given the
massive social issues, from health to education, Nelson Mandela’s party
had to address after coming to power in 1994.
Fallout has cast a shadow over South African politics ever since. Mr
Zuma was deputy president at the time. Schabir Shaikh, his former
financial adviser, was found guilty and jailed in 2005 for trying to
solicit bribes for Mr Zuma from a subsidiary of French arms company
Thales.
The company is facing charges in the same case.
Charges against Mr Zuma were filed but then set aside by the National
Prosecuting Authority shortly before he successfully ran for president
in 2009.
The charges were re-instated in 2016.
Since his election nine years ago, his opponents have fought a lengthy legal battle to have the charges reinstated.
Mr Zuma countered with his own legal challenges.
(Reuters/NAN)

