Tag: South Africa

  • South Africa’s Jacob Zuma takes aim in rifle photo

    South Africa’s embattled former President Jacob Zuma has found himself at the centre of fresh controversy after tweeting a photo of himself taking aim with a rifle.

    Its meaning was unambiguous, and provocative.

    A day after he had learned that a judge had issued an arrest warrant for him for failing to appear in court on corruption charges related to a multi-million dollar arms deal, Mr Zuma tweeted a photograph, on his official account, showing him aiming a rifle at an unknown target.

    For a man who uses social media only rarely, and apparently carefully, the implication was clear to all South Africans.

    It was a display of angry defiance against a judiciary and an “elite” which – Mr Zuma and his supporters have argued for years – is biased against him and involved in a dark conspiracy to undermine him and the “radical economic transformation” agenda that he unveiled towards the end of his corruption-riddled presidency.

    ‘Evil white establishment’

    As the photograph provoked furious exchanges on social media, Mr Zuma’s family and his remaining allies in the governing African National Congress (ANC) have rallied to his defence.

    His son Edward claimed the arrest warrant, issued by a judge but suspended until Mr Zuma’s next scheduled court appearance, had somehow been orchestrated by his political enemies.

    Edward Zuma also said the rifle photo was two years old – a claim that hardly seemed relevant in the context in which it was used.

    The head of the ANC’s Women’s League, Bathabile Dlamini, went further, speaking of “an invisible hand” orchestrating a campaign against the former president on behalf of “an evil white establishment”.

    But many South Africans have reacted with contempt, and wry humour, to this latest incident, and see it as part of a decades-long attempt by Mr Zuma to avoid facing trial for alleged corruption by casting himself as a victim, floating frequent conspiracy theories and seeking endless court delays.

    The arrest warrant issued on Tuesday followed Mr Zuma’s failure to show up in court for a fraud and corruption case that dates back to the 1990s.

    The former president’s lawyer produced a doctor’s “sick note” to explain his client’s absence, but the judge questioned the credibility of the document and warned that Mr Zuma would face arrest if he did not appear for his next court appearance in May.

    Mr Zuma has repeatedly insisted that the corruption charges against him are part of a sophisticated western plot against him.

    He has also claimed, with no evidence produced, that those same, unnamed enemies have sought to poison him. It is almost impossible not to see the “rifle” picture in that context.

    ‘Rampant looting’

    But while Mr Zuma still enjoys some limited support in the ANC, and more generally in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal, his antics and conspiracy theories are increasingly seen by many as a sign of desperation.

    South Africans have watched, for months, as senior officials have given damning evidence of corruption at a judge-led public inquiry into the Zuma presidency – an era which Mr Zuma’s successor, Cyril Ramaphosa, has since acknowledged was a period of rampant looting by state officials.

    Mr Zuma’s behaviour is also seen here in the context of a “fight-back” by an allegedly corrupt faction within the ANC that lost control of the presidency and fears that, under a revived justice system, some of its most prominent members may soon join Mr Zuma in facing criminal charges.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Five biggest scandals of South Africa ex-president Zuma

    An arrest warrant was issued on Tuesday for South Africa’s former president Jacob Zuma after he failed to appear at a pre-trial hearing on fraud, corruption and racketeering charges related to a 1990s arms deal.

    Zuma’s lawyers blamed ill-health for the 77-year-old’s absence, and the execution of the warrant was deferred until May 6, when the long-running case is due to resume.

    It is far from the first scandal to hit Zuma, who reluctantly stepped down under pressure from his ANC party in February 2018 in the face of mounting allegations that his friends, the wealthy Gupta family, had undue influence on his administration.

    Here are five of his biggest scandals:

    Arms deal

    Corruption charges have long loomed over Zuma in relation to a multi-billion-dollar arms deal signed in 1999 when he was deputy president.

    He and other officials are alleged to have accepted bribes from five European arms manufacturers to influence the choice of weaponry bought in the deal.

    But the charges were shelved in 2009 — the year Zuma became president.

    After protracted back-and-forth court cases, in March 2018 — a month after he resigned as president — national prosecutors decided Zuma was liable to face prosecution on 783 counts of corruption, fraud, racketeering and money laundering charges relating to the arms deal.

    Zuma’s advisor, Schabir Shaik, was jailed for 15 years in 2005. He was released on medical parole in 2009 after Zuma became president.

    The former president faces jail for the criminal charges over hundreds of payments he allegedly received, valuing a total of $270,000.

    Zuma denies the charges.

    Nkandla residence upgrades

    South Africa’s graft watchdog in 2014 found Zuma to have “benefited unduly” from so-called security upgrades to his rural Nkandla residence in KwaZulu-Natal province.

    The work, paid for with taxpayers’ money, cost $24 million and included a swimming pool — which was described as a fire-fighting facility — as well as a cattle enclosure, an amphitheatre and a visitors’ centre.

    For two years, Zuma fought the order to repay part of the money. The scandal came to dominate his presidency, with opposition lawmakers chanting “Pay back the money!” every time he appeared in parliament.

    In March 2016 the constitutional court ordered Zuma to pay back the cash, the judges accusing him of failing to respect and uphold the constitution.

    Guptagate

    As the Nkandla debacle built to a climax, its place in the headlines was overtaken by a new scandal, known as Guptagate.

    The scandal involved the president’s allegedly corrupt relationship with a wealthy family of Indian immigrants headed by three brothers — Ajay, Atul and Rajesh Gupta — who built a business empire in mining, media, technology and engineering.

    Smouldering rumours of the family’s undue influence on the president burst into the open in 2016 when evidence emerged that the Guptas had offered key government jobs to those who could help their business interests.

    Former deputy finance minister Mcebisi Jonas revealed that the Guptas had offered him a promotion shortly before Zuma sacked respected finance minister Nhlanhla Nene in December 2015.

    Rape charges and HIV myth

    Before taking office, Zuma was put on trial in 2006 for rape, in a case that dismayed many South Africans.

    Zuma said the sex with the 31-year-old family friend was consensual and he was acquitted.

    But he told the court he had showered to avoid contracting HIV after having unprotected sex with his HIV-positive accuser — a common but dangerous myth.

    Zuma was head of the South African National AIDS Council at the time, and was pilloried for his ignorance.

    Nearly a fifth of South Africans aged between 15 and 49 are HIV-positive.

    Omar al-Bashir

    Then Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir was allowed to attend a meeting of the African Union in Johannesburg in 2015, despite an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes in the conflict in Darfur.

    The government said the fact that he was attending the summit as a head of state meant he had immunity, but the court disagreed.

    Zuma faced an impeachment vote in parliament over the issue in September 2016, but ANC lawmakers voted overwhelmingly against it.

    Source: monitor.co.ug

  • South Africa’s university shutdown threatened

    The South African Union of Students (SAUS) has called for a shutdown of all universities following a breakdown in talks with the Department of Higher Education and Training late last year.

    The talks were attempting to address demands raised by SAUS and Student Representative Council (SRC) representatives from across the country.

    SAUS submitted a list of demands to the department on 16 January. These included: wiping out of all student debt, re-opening of National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) applications, free registration for vulnerable, and poor students, and improvement of dilapidated student accommodation and infrastructure.

    According to SAUS, it has held talks at 24 universities and numerous student representative bodies have agreed to join the proposed shutdown.

    On Sunday the Minister of Higher Education Blade Nzimande released a statement addressing SAUS’s demands.

    His statement suggests that NSFAS may be looking into erasing a substantial amount of historic student debt. It has “processed” about R450 million so far, wrote the minister. But he also said that public funds for universities are “constrained” and “there is no possibility for debts of students who are not NSFAS beneficiaries” to be eradicated.

    Nzimande said that all students under NSFAS who are carrying debt from 2019 can sign an acknowledgement of debt form in order to register in 2020 at the university they are returning to.

    Protests started this week at the University of Kwazulu Natal (UKZN), University of South Africa (UNISA) Pietermaritzburg campus and North West University (NWU).

    According to a UKZN statement, in the early hours of Tuesday morning, protesting students set alight the Security Control Centre building on the Westville campus.

    Students at UNISA’s Pietermaritzburg campus blocked Langalibalele Road with burning tyres to protest NSFAS students being excluded.

    NWU spokesperson Louis Jacobs confirmed that the institution has had to close its Mafikeng campus since Monday due to students protesting in solidarity with SAUS’s demands.

    In a statement, the Department of Higher Education and Training “strongly condemned the violent protests… which led to damages at two university campuses”.

    SAUS spokesperson Thabo Shingange said that the organisation “condemns any violence during these protests”. He distanced the organisation “from any acts of criminality that seek to undermine our genuine cause”. But he said the union condemned the recent use of private security guards at universities. He also reported that many SRC members involved in the protests are being threatened with suspension.

    “While some universities are already protesting, we believe that if we all discuss these issues in good faith we can find a way forward before the other universities … join the shutdown,” said Shingange.

    GroundUp is being sued after we exposed dodgy Lottery deals involving millions of rands. Please help fund our defence. You can support us via Givengain, Snapscan, EFT, PayPal or PayFast.

    Source: allafrica.com

  • Floods and power cuts hit South Africa

    Heavy rains have battered parts of South Africa, submerging whole neighbourhoods and flooding coal mines and power stations in a nation already hit by electricity blackouts.

    At least 700 homes have been washed away near the capital, Pretoria, public broadcaster SABC reported.

    Read:Old mortuary in South Africa becomes a home for the living

    The state-run power utility warned of further electricity cuts, saying heavy rains had affected its operations.

    The cuts have halted gold and diamond production at some leading mines.

    Read:South Africa has no energy crisis Energy minister

    Harmony Gold said it had called off underground shifts because of the power cuts, known as load shedding in South Africa.

    Petra Diamonds said it was “removing all people from underground, except those required for essential services, with only pumping to prevent flooding and ventilation for safety being allowed”.

  • Ex-South Africa minister charged with corruption

    A former South African state security minister has appeared in court on allegations of corruption.

    Bongani Bongo – who was seen as close to former President Jacob Zuma – is accused of offering money to a lawyer giving evidence at a parliamentary inquiry into corruption at the state power company, Eskom in 2017.

    Read:Corruption, an embarrassing topic, says Buhari in Saudi Arabia

    Mr Bongo did not enter a plea. He was released on bail and is due back in court in January.

    Mr Zuma appointed him state security minister two weeks after the alleged bribery took place.

    Read:Jacob Zuma to face corruption inquiry

    He lasted only four months in the job.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Prosecutor dies after gun goes off in SA court

    A lawyer has died after she was hit by a bullet when a gun, which was being used in court as evidence, went off by accident in KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa, police say.

    Adelaide Ferreira-Watt succumbed to her wounds just hours after the bullet from the shotgun hit her in the hip.

    Read:Prisons Officer guns down masked robber

    The gun went off as it was being presented to the court as evidence in a house robbery case.

    Police say they are investigating Ms Ferreira-Watt’s death as a case of manslaughter.

    Read:Gunman in US school shooting dies as police hunt motive

    They will also look into why the gun was loaded and whether appropriate steps had been taken to ensure the gun was safe to carry in a public space

    Source: bbc.com

  • South African man killed dad for reprimanding him about smoking, gets life sentence

    A man who had his father killed because he was fed up of being reprimanded for smoking nyaope and using other substances, has been sentenced to life behind bars in the Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg, South Africa.

    Brutus Mhlanga conspired with Caswell Ntsheula, Hloniphani Ntombela and Patrick Ziqubu to kill his father in August 2017.

    Mhlanga offered his father’s car as a “down payment” to his co-accused and promised to pay them R150 000 once he received his inheritance.

    On December 11 that year, Ntsheula, Ntombela, Ziqubu and a fifth suspect known only as Thando, went to Mhlanga’s parents’ house in Katlehong armed with a gun and a knife.

    There, Ntsheula and Thando shot and stabbed Mhlanga’s father, Shiviti Freddy Mhlanga, killing him. They also shot Mhlanga’s mother, Cokweni Lizzy Mhlanga, but she survived.

    Read:South African mom found guilty of murdering her 4 children

    The men then fled the scene in the deceased’s Toyota Hilux.

    On Tuesday, Judge Seun Moshidi sentenced the men to life imprisonment and multiple years’ imprisonment for conspiracy to commit murder, murder, robbery with aggravating circumstances, the illegal possession of firearm and ammunition, and attempted murder, National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) spokesperson Phindi Mjonondwane said.

    Ntsheula was sentenced to life imprisonment plus 45 years, Ntombela to life plus 51 years, Ziqubu to life plus 63 years and Mhlanga to life plus 51 years.

    They were arrested after a police officer received information that Ntsheula was in possession of a firearm without a licence.

    Searching Ntsheula’s home, police found one round of ammunition. When police asked where the firearm was, he told them that Ntombela had it.

    Police then went to Ntombela’s home and searched it, but no firearm was found. Ntombela informed the police that he had another house which they could search.

    Read:South Africa: Man pleads guilty to raping child in toilet

    Car reported stolen

    Upon arrival at the other property, police found the Toyota Hilux parked in the driveway. When they ran a check on the vehicle, they found that it had been reported stolen and that the owner had been killed.

    “Ntombela was surprised as he was not expecting the vehicle to have been reported stolen as it was a ‘down payment’ [for the killing],” Mjonondwane said.

    When asked about the vehicle’s keys, Ntombela directed police to Ziqubu’s home where a firearm was found.

    When police asked them where the vehicle came from, the men directed them to Mhlanga’s home where they found a murder scene.

    Mhlanga’s mother was taken to hospital because she had a gunshot wound to her chest.

    Police said Mhlanga had his father killed because he was fed up with being reprimanded for smoking nyaope and using other substances.

    Ntombela was arrested on December 12, 2017, and the other three men were arrested the following day.

    “The NPA commends the persistent work by police officers to solve this senseless crime, as well as the commitment and dedication displayed by the prosecutor in securing a successful prosecution,” Mjonondwane said.

    Source: www.news24.com

  • South Africa has no energy crisis – Energy minister

    Just after publishing the wrong version of the Integrated Resource Plan, and with Eskom being forced to admit that more than a third of its infrastructure is broken and cannot be relied on to generate electricity on demand, Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe denied South Africa has an energy crisis.

    ‘We have no energy crisis, South Africa has an energy problem that will turn into a disaster if not attended,’ said the minister on the sidelines of the media briefing to announce the IRP.

    Read:South Africa hit by power cuts

    The Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) seems to be an acknowledgement by the government that it does not have the required skills capacity and the balance sheet to continue investing in the electricity-generating infrastructure of any significance.

    Thus it has designed a plan that heavily relies on the simplicity, cost-effectiveness and speed of the private sector to fill the gap. And quickly, by government standards anyway. These seem to be the driving priorities that will inform South Africa’s energy investment plan for the next 20 years.

    Read:South Africa is open for business in African countries Phumla Williams

    The integrated resource plan of 2019, unveiled by Mineral Resources and Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe, shifts focus away from the heavy, complex and expensive baseload infrastructure projects this country.

    Source: www.allafrica.com

  • Xenophobia: 84 Nigerians return from South Africa today

    84 Nigerians evacuated from South Africa is expected to arrive in Nigeria on Wednesday at 2.pm local time via the Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos in company of officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

    The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which disclosed this in an update made available to newsmen in Abuja on Wednesday, explained that although 313 Nigerians were confirmed as those to form the first batch of evacuees, only 84 of them would arrive on Wednesday because they were the ones cleared to embark on the flight to Nigeria.

    According to the ministry, 640 Nigerians have indicated the desire to return from South Africa and have registered to do so.

    Read:Xenophobia hub: Over 600 Nigerians head home from South Africa

    The ministry added that the second batch of evacuees would depart Johannesburg for Nigeria on Friday.

    “The Air peace aircraft which was scheduled to take off at 9. a.m local time was delayed due to the fact that checking in and clearance procedures by immigration are very slow.

    “There are complains of system failure and out of the 313 confirmed for first batch of evacuation today, only 84 are cleared so far.

    Read:Successive SA governments have been weak in tackling xenophobic attacks expert

    “The more the Aircraft waits for the passengers, the higher the amount the Aircraft will pay for Parking,” the ministry stated.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that following the xenophobic attacks on Nigerians in South Africa, Proprietor of the Airline, Mr Allen Onyeama, volunteered to send an aircraft to evacuate Nigerians willing to return free of charge.

    The process which was earlier scheduled to commence on Sept. 6 had stalled as it was reported that most Nigerians willing to return did not have valid passports or travel documents to complete immigration formalities.

    Source: www.punchng.com

  • Ken Thompson pens thought provoking poem to South African Ambassador

    To the South African ambassador to Ghana, who left school with 2 ‘O’ levels in Art and Afrikaans.

    (more…)

  • South Africa shuts embassy in Nigeria after reprisal attacks

    South Africa has temporarily closed its embassy in Nigeria following violence against South African businesses in reprisal for attacks on foreign-owned stores in Johannesburg, while Nigeria has announced plans to evacuate its nationals from South Africa.

    South African Foreign Affairs Minister Naledi Pandor said on Thursday that the embassy was closed temporarily after threats led to fears for staff safety.

    “There is Afrophobia we are sensing that exists, there is resentment and we need to address that,” Pandor told Reuters news agency.

    Foreign ministry spokesman Lunga Ngqengelele confirmed that the diplomatic missions in the Nigerian cities of Lagos and Abuja have been closed since Wednesday.

    The announcement, which signals worsening diplomatic relations between the two African countries, comes after Nigeria introduced plans to evacuate its nationals from South Africa following a wave of attacks on foreigners, including Nigerians.

    Evacuation offer

    The Nigerian foreign ministry said Air Peace, a commercial airline, had offered to send an aircraft on Friday to evacuate nationals who were willing to return, “free of charge”.

    “The general public is hereby advised to inform their relatives in South Africa to take advantage of this laudable gesture,” Nigerian foreign ministry spokesman Ferdinand Nwonye said on Wednesday.

    Read:Xenophobic attacks: Nigerian airline to evacuate citizens free of charge

    “Interested Nigerians are therefore advised to liaise with the High Commission of Nigeria in Pretoria and the Consulate General of Nigeria in Johannesburg for further necessary arrangement.”

    The statement was made after Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama said Nigeria would not cave to Pretoria.

    “The South African government has to assume its responsibilities and protect Nigerians in South Africa and we have to hold them to account and they have to do that as well as pay full compensation,” he said.

    Tensions rising

    It also came a day after Nigeria pulled out of the World Economic Forum (WEF) gathering in Cape Town, South Africa, casting a cloud over initiatives to boost intra-African trade.

    Nigeria also recalled its High Commissioner to South Africa, Ambassador Kabiru Bala.

    A presidential source told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that Nigeria also demanded full compensation for the loss of life and property of Nigerians affected by the attacks.

    Rioting in South Africa has killed at least five people in Johannesburg and Pretoria in recent days.

    Police in the country has yet to pinpoint what triggered the violence, which began on Sunday, when protesters armed with makeshift weapons roamed the streets of Pretoria’s business district, pelting shops with rocks and petrol bombs and running off with goods.

    Read:Stop tagging South Africans xenophobic South Africa High Commissioner

    Authorities have made almost 300 arrests, while people across the continent have protested and voiced their anger on social media.

    Analysts have noted contributing factors to the latest violence include high unemployment and frustration with limited economic opportunities.

    Reprisal attacks

    On Tuesday, Nigerians launched what appeared to be reprisals against South African businesses in several cities across the country. Police said dozens have been arrested for looting and attacks on South African retail and telecoms firms.

    Abuja has repeatedly condemned the reprisals, which it insisted could only hurt Nigerians working in the affected firms.

    Nigerian police said on Wednesday that security had been strengthened around South African businesses.

    Source: aljazeera.com