A South
African court issued an arrest warrant for former president Jacob Zuma on
Tuesday, after he skipped court on grounds of needing medical treatment, but
the judge stayed the warrant until his corruption trial resumes on May 6.
Zuma’s lawyer presented the judge with a sick note
from what he said was a military hospital, but Judge Dhaya Pillay questioned
whether the note was valid, as there was no medical number showing if and where
the doctor was certified.
“I don’t even know if [he] ... is a doctor. There
is ... nothing to suggest that he is,” she said, before issuing the warrant.
The former leader is on trial on 18 charges of
fraud, racketeering and money laundering relating to a $2 billion arms deal
with French defense firm Thales in 1999, when Zuma was deputy president. He
rejects the allegations as a politically motivated witch-hunt.
Dan Mantsha, Zuma’s lawyer, said that he was abroad
for medical treatment, without saying where. Local media have suggested he is
in Cuba, although it was not immediately possible to verify this.
Pillay concluded that the note was insufficient to
excuse Zuma from appearing for the trial, but gave him until it resumes on May
6 to turn up before the warrant kicks in.
Zuma, president from 2009-2018, had previously
applied for a permanent stay of prosecution but the court in Pietermaritzburg
threw out his appeal in November.
He is accused of accepting 500,000 rand ($34,000)
annually from Thales in 1999, in exchange for protecting the company from an
investigation into the deal.
Thales, known as Thompson-CSF at the time, has said
it had no knowledge of any transgressions by any of its employees in relation
to the award of the contracts.
The National Prosecuting Authority initially filed
the charges against Zuma a decade ago, but set them aside shortly before he
successfully ran for president in 2009. Following appeals and lobbying by
opposition parties, the NPA reinstated the charges in March 2018.
Pillay also accepted an application by the company
on Tuesday to be represented by lawyer Barry Roux, who defended Paralympian
athlete Oscar Pistorius over the 2013 murder of his girlfriend.
No comments:
Post a Comment