Trials of Zuma, SA lawmakers throw spotlight on corruption

Trials of Zuma, SA lawmakers throw spotlight on corruption

CAPE TOWN – South Africa’s would-be president and a group of lawmakers appear in court on the same day next week, as two of the most potentially damaging trials of the post-apartheid era put the spotlight on corruption.

Some South Africans say the trials, whose same start today is a coincidence, underscores the commitment of President Thabo Mbeki to stamp out corruption dogging every level of his government. But critics charge the president has focused attention on his axed deputy, Jacob Zuma, to avoid addressing wider questions that could drag down his administration.Zuma, who was acquitted of rape in May, goes on trial in the Pietermaritzburg High Court alongside a French weapons company accused of bribing him to deflect investigations into a 1999 arms deal with the South African government that has already destroyed a number of political careers.At the same time, 29 lawmakers and travel agents will appear in Cape Town on charges that they defrauded Parliament of up to N$24 million by using vouchers intended for official travel to pay for luxury holidays, meals and car rentals.”It is fantastic that such strong action could be taken against the deputy president of a country,” said Professor Adam Habib, head of the democracy and governance programme at the Human Sciences Research Council.”It doesn’t even happen much in the industrialised world, and it’s especially worthwhile noting in a young democracy like South Africa.”Charges were brought against Zuma after he was implicated in the fraud and corruption conviction of his friend and financial adviser, Schabir Shaik.The judge in that case found Shaik had made payments to the former anti-apartheid fighter totalling some N$1,2 million to fund a lavish lifestyle.He also found that Zuma was aware of Shaik’s efforts to facilitate a yearly payment of N$500 000 to the ex-deputy president from French arms manufacturer Thint Holdings – formerly Thomson CSF.Shaik was sentenced to 15 years in jail but is appealing his conviction.Zuma, who was dismissed and charged soon after, denies any wrongdoing.His supporters claim the case against Zuma is part of a plot to prevent him succeeding Mbeki when the president completes his second and final term in 2009.The trial also threatens to engulf Mbeki, who acknowledged in a newspaper interview earlier this year that he authorised a letter sent by Zuma lambasting a probe by a parliamentary public accounts committee into the 1999 weapons deal – a document that featured prominently at the Shaik trial.Mbeki insisted there had never been any secret about this, but indicated he would be reluctant to be summoned as a witness.Prosecutors are requesting that the case be postponed until next year, which could aggravate a damaging power struggle between supporters of the ANC’s top two leaders.Scandal has surrounded the multibillion-rand package to buy ships, submarines, helicopters, jets and other weaponry from European and South African firms from the outset.One of its early casualties was the ANC’s former chief whip, Tony Yengeni, who was sentenced to four years in prison for defrauding Parliament and accepting a big discount on a luxury 4X4 Mercedes Benz from Daimler Benz Aerospace during negotiations on the deal.Last month, German investigators launched a probe into a group of companies suspected of paying bribes to secure a lucrative contract to supply warships and submarines to South Africa’s navy.Critics say such investigations have failed to act as a deterrent and that the arrest of parliamentarians – most of them ANC members – in the so-called Travelgate scam proves that fraud and wrongdoing are rampant in the corridors of power.Allegations of corruption are just as pervasive at the local level, with many complaining that cronyism and nepotism are more important in the awarding of tenders and allocation of state-provided housing than merit or need.The need to clean up municipal government was Mbeki’s main campaign theme at local elections earlier this year.- Nampa-APBut critics charge the president has focused attention on his axed deputy, Jacob Zuma, to avoid addressing wider questions that could drag down his administration.Zuma, who was acquitted of rape in May, goes on trial in the Pietermaritzburg High Court alongside a French weapons company accused of bribing him to deflect investigations into a 1999 arms deal with the South African government that has already destroyed a number of political careers.At the same time, 29 lawmakers and travel agents will appear in Cape Town on charges that they defrauded Parliament of up to N$24 million by using vouchers intended for official travel to pay for luxury holidays, meals and car rentals.”It is fantastic that such strong action could be taken against the deputy president of a country,” said Professor Adam Habib, head of the democracy and governance programme at the Human Sciences Research Council.”It doesn’t even happen much in the industrialised world, and it’s especially worthwhile noting in a young democracy like South Africa.”Charges were brought against Zuma after he was implicated in the fraud and corruption conviction of his friend and financial adviser, Schabir Shaik.The judge in that case found Shaik had made payments to the former anti-apartheid fighter totalling some N$1,2 million to fund a lavish lifestyle.He also found that Zuma was aware of Shaik’s efforts to facilitate a yearly payment of N$500 000 to the ex-deputy president from French arms manufacturer Thint Holdings – formerly Thomson CSF.Shaik was sentenced to 15 years in jail but is appealing his conviction.Zuma, who was dismissed and charged soon after, denies any wrongdoing.His supporters claim the case against Zuma is part of a plot to prevent him succeeding Mbeki when the president completes his second and final term in 2009.The trial also threatens to engulf Mbeki, who acknowledged in a newspaper interview earlier this year that he authorised a letter sent by Zuma lambasting a probe by a parliamentary public accounts committee into the 1999 weapons deal – a document that featured prominently at the Shaik trial.Mbeki insisted there had never been any secret about this, but indicated he would be reluctant to be summoned as a witness.Prosecutors are requesting that the case be postponed until next year, which could aggravate a damaging power struggle between supporters of the ANC’s top two leaders.Scandal has surrounded the multibillion-rand package to buy ships, submarines, helicopters, jets and other weaponry from European and South African firms from the outset.One of its early casualties was the ANC’s former chief whip, Tony Yengeni, who was sentenced to four years in prison for defrauding Parliament and accepting a big discount on a luxury 4X4 Mercedes Benz from Daimler Benz Aerospace during negotiations on the deal.Last month, German investigators launched a probe into a group of companies suspected of paying bribes to secure a lucrative contract to supply warships and submarines to South Africa’s navy.Critics say such investigations have failed to act as a deterrent and that the arrest of parliamentarians – most of them ANC members – in the so-called Travelgate scam proves that fraud and wrongdoing are rampant in the corridors of power.Allegations of corruption are just as pervasive at the local level, with many complaining that cronyism and nepotism are more important in the awarding of tenders and allocation of state-provided housing than merit or need.The need to clean up municipal government was Mbeki’s main campaign theme at local elections earlier this year.- Nampa-AP

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