Jacob Zuma Lampoons Judges After Election Ban
Jacob Zuma

The former President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma has launched a scathing attack on some of the country’s top judges after he was barred from running for parliament earlier in the week. 

In his first interview since the ban, Mr Zuma told reporters that the Constitutional Court got its ruling wrong by deciding that he was unfit to run, based on his 2021 contempt court conviction.

“I expected that from our judges, but they are definitely wrong. Not correct,” the 82-year-old said, adding that the constitution should be changed.

Ahead of next week’s general election, Mr Zuma had been campaigning under the banner of the newly formed uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party.

He joined the party after falling out with the governing African National Congress (ANC), which he used to lead.

The electoral commission argued that the constitution bars anyone who was sentenced to more than 12 months in prison from serving as a lawmaker – a view backed by the Constitutional Court judges.

Mr Zuma was convicted in 2021 for refusing to testify at an inquiry investigating corruption during his presidency.

His lawyers had insisted he was entitled to become an MP as his sentence was reduced to three months after current President Cyril Ramaphosa released him from prison in what was widely seen as an attempt to placate the former president’s angry supporters.

“The judges of the Constitutional Court have acted very funny to me – towards me in particular,” Mr Zuma told the newsmen.

“They are not taking into account the will of the people of this country, they use their own will.”

He was president from 2009 to 2018 before being forced out as leader of the ANC amid allegations of widespread corruption in his government.

Read Also: S’Africa’s Top Court Bars Zuma From Contesting In Election

The corruption, widely known as “state capture”, saw hundreds of millions of dollars of public assets taken into private hands. Mr Zuma has always denied any direct role in corruption, but is due to face trial next year on allegations of bribery.

He told reporters he had been wrongly stripped of his role as leader of the ANC.

“I don’t know what ‘state capture’ means. If people say I am corrupt, what did I do? Do you have any facts about it? Am I guilty?

“I was removed before the end of my term, and nothing was produced as evidence that this was an issue.”

Mr Zuma’s MK party had previously voiced its desire to change South Africa’s constitution, which was drawn up 30 years ago at the birth of the country’s democracy following decades of white-minority rule.

Asked about this in the light of his election ban, Mr Zuma reiterated that the historic document needed to be changed.

“This constitution in the continent of Africa is guided by the laws from Europe, not us,” he said.

“There is nothing that has come right in this continent because we are still dominated by those who were the ones [who] slaved us, and after slavery, oppressed us, and after oppression, put their own laws to run us.

“There are details that clash with our lives.”

Africa Today News, New York reports that an Ipsos opinion poll released last month gave MK 8% of the vote, and the ANC 40% as it loses support to MK and other opposition parties.

Africa Today News, New York

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