South Africa’s Ex-President Zuma Turns Himself In For 15-month Prison Term

Zuma compared the judges who handed him the sentence to the country’s apartheid rulers.

South Africa's former President Jacob Zuma (Credits: Reuters)

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Former South African President Jacob Zuma handed himself over to the police on July 7 to serve a 15-month prison sentence, days after vowing to defy court order to do so.

The Supreme Court, on July 6, ordered Zuma’s arrest in case he failed to appear for his charges before July 4. Zuma was admitted to the Estcourt Correctional Center near his home in KwaZulu-Natal province just before midnight, according to the Department of Correctional Services.

South Africa’s Constitutional Court ruled on June 29 that Zuma was in contempt of court and handed him a sentence of 15 months imprisonment for defying court orders to appear before a corruption investigation spanning nine years of his term.

“Zuma was served with the order, and it is impossible to conclude anything other than that he was unequivocally aware of what it required of him,” said acting Chief Justice Sisi Khampepe while delivering the ruling in the Constitutional Court in Johannesburg.

The Constitutional Court had given Zuma five days to hand himself over to a police station in Nkandla or Johannesburg.

A further three-day grace period would be allowed to elapse before he should be forcefully detained, the ruling stated. A deadline for him to voluntarily surrender to authorities was set for midnight on July 4. 

Zuma filed an appeal at the Supreme Court on July 2, terming the sentence he received “cruel and degrading.”

“The sentence reminds our people of apartheid days, sending someone to jail without trial could be a travesty to our justice,” Zuma told journalists outside his home in Nkandla in KwaZulu-Natal province.

Hundreds of his supporters formed a human shield around his home to prevent the police from arresting him, defying Covid-19 containment regulations.

 “[There is] no need for me to go to jail today. Sending me to jail during the height of a pandemic, at my age, is the same as sentencing me to death,” Zuma told reporters.

Zuma led South Africa for nearly a third of its post-apartheid history and was an associate of Nelson Mandela’s during the freedom struggle. 

During his term, corruption became so entrenched that the allegations against him are termed “state capture.”

Zuma is being prosecuted separately on racketeering charges, corruption, fraud, and money laundering stemming from a deal with a French arms manufacturer in which he allegedly took bribes while he was deputy president in 1999.

While he was not charged for any crime related to the deal at the time, his reputation was tarnished after his friend and former financial adviser, Schabir Shaik, was found guilty of corruption and fraud in the arms scandal.

Consequently, President Thabo Mbeki in 2005 sacked him as deputy president.

However, in December 2007, Zuma turned tables on Mbeki by orchestrating the ruling African National Party congress to pass a vote of no-confidence in him, leading to his resignation.

He then took the reins of the ruling party and, consequently, that of South Africa.

However, precisely ten years later, in December 2017, Zuma was on the receiving end of similar political machinations from his deputy-now-President Matamela Cyril Ramaphosa. 

(With inputs from ANI)

(Edited by Amrita Das and Kipchumba Some)