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Àarẹ ilẹ̀ South Africa nígbà kan rí, Jacob Zuma ti fa ara rẹ̀ lé àwọn ọlọ́pa lọ́wọ́ láti sẹ̀wọ̀n osù mẹẹdogun tílé ẹjọ́ dá fún un lórí ẹ̀sùn pé, ó kọ ti ọgbọn in sí ipe ilé ẹjọ́.

Ó fa ara rẹ̀ lé àwọn agbófinró lọ́wọ́ nínú ilé rẹ̀ tó wà lẹ́kun Kwazulu-Natal.

Ileesẹ ọlọ́pa ló ti kọ́kọ́ sèkìlọ̀ wí pé àwọn ti setán láti fi kélé òfin gbe ní tipá típa tó bá kùnà láti jọ̀wọ́ ara rẹ̀ lóru mọ́jú.

Lọ́sẹ̀ tó kọjá nílé ẹjọ́ gbé ìdájọ́ àwọn osu mẹẹdogun ka le fún Zuma nítorí pé ó kùnà láti farahàn nílé ẹjọ́ lórí ẹ̀sùn síse owó ìlú kúnmọkùnmọ.

Babatunde Salaudeen

Foreign

Former South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma, who’s been repeatedly implicated in aiding and abetting the plunder of state funds during the nine years he led South Africa, was sentenced to 15 months in jail for defying a court order to testify at a graft inquiry.

The South African Constitutional Court ruled in January that Zuma had to respond to questions from a judicial commission headed by Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo. But the 79-year-old former intelligence operative accused the court and Zondo of bias, walked out of one scheduled panel hearing in November and boycotted another in February. The panel responded by filing contempt charges against him.

“This sends an unequivocal message in this our constitutional dispensation, the rule of law and the administration of justice prevails,” acting Chief Justice Sisi Khampepe said in a ruling in Johannesburg on Tuesday.

According to Bloomberg, the ruling offers a mixed blessing for President Cyril Ramaphosa, who has made the fight against graft a top priority. While Zuma’s incarceration will silence one of his biggest detractors and demonstrate his administration’s commitment to upholding the rule of law, it could also widen divisions within the ruling party and alienate its supporters in the former president’s home province of KwaZulu-Natal.

The government estimates more than 500 billion rand ($35 billion) was stolen from the state during Jacob Zuma’s rule, and at least 40 witnesses who’ve appeared before Zondo linked the ex-president to the looting spree.

acob Zuma, who the ruling party forced to quit in 2018 to stem a loss of electoral support, has denied wrongdoing and says the allegations against him are part of a smear campaign, Bloomberg reported.

Vanguard