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Mbeki says judge got key fact wrong

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Published Date: 22 September 2008
THABO Mbeki last night gave his last major public address as president of South Africa after being forced to resign on Saturday – and said the high court judge whose ruling triggered his political demise had got the most crucial fact wrong.
Mr Mbeki was plunged into a fight for his reputation and political life 11 days ago when Judge Chris Nicholson dismissed corruption and fraud charges against his bitter rival, Jacob Zuma. The judge said Mr Mbeki may have interfered with the prosecution process.

An unsmiling Mr Mbeki said in a television address to the nation he had "categorically" never interfered in the work of the constitutionally independent National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), including "the painful matter" of Mr Zuma's case.

If Mr Mbeki and his supporters can prove their version of events is true, it would follow that he has been toppled on a false premise that would destabilise South African politics.

The NPA has appealed against the 200-page ruling delivered by the judge. The appeal hearings alone will cause huge political controversy, and if successful could open the way for a new prosecution against Mr Zuma.

Baleka Mbete, speaker of South Africa's parliament, will be named today as the country's first female head of state. She will serve as interim president until scheduled parliamentary elections next May, when Mr Zuma and his supporters expect him to become president.

Mr Mbeki, 66, had been in power for nine years as successor to Nelson Mandela, the country's first black president.

Before the broadcast, Mr Mbeki convened his last cabinet meeting. Many of his ministers are expected to submit their resignations in solidarity.

Judge Nicholson's contentious ruling had exposed Mr Mbeki to volleys of wounding arrows from his enemies. Those foes were fellow comrades in the African National Congress, which historically and rhetorically has put unity and solidarity above all other values but which is now bitterly divided by in-fighting.

Mr Mbeki agreed to resign after the top officials of his party on the ANC's national executive committee asked him on Saturday to step down.

Announcing Mr Mbeki's overthrow, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said the decision had been made in the interests of the stability of the country and the unity of the ANC.

But Helen Zille, leader of the opposition, said the move "has nothing to do with unity". He said it had "everything to do" with multiple bribes Mr Zuma is alleged to have taken in relation to South Africa's £5.2 billion arms deal with European weapons manufacturers.

While there have been few regrets expressed about Mr Mbeki's departure, there is widespread apprehension about life under Mr Zuma if he becomes South Africa's president.

Mr Mbeki became internationally known for his controversial views on Aids, joining maverick scientists who denied the HIV virus was the cause of the illness. He led the resistance to anti-retroviral treatment.

With some six million South Africans HIV-positive and 1,000 dying from Aids-related illnesses each day, human rights campaigner and ANC member Zachie Asmat, said: "I would have liked to see him impeached for causing the deaths of many hundreds of thousands of people living with HIV; for the corruption of the arms deal; for the undermining of every independent state institution."

Meanwhile, last night Mondli Makhanya, the editor of South Africa's Sunday Times newspaper, warned: "We do not know where we are going.

"Zuma and the leadership of the ANC are not in control of their support base.

"Party meetings are akin to pub brawls."

PROFILE

SOUTH Africa yesterday began preparations to install Baleka Mbete, described in one newspaper as "hard as nails, with the survival skills of an alley cat", as the country's first woman president.

Ms Mbete, 59, currently the Speaker of the parliament in Cape Town, will take over some time this week after Thabo Mbeki resigns, although it is likely Jacob Zuma will return following next May's elections.

Ms Mbete trained as a teacher before going into exile to work for the ANC during the apartheid era. She returned in 1990 and was elected an MP after the country's first all-race elections in 1994. She has three sons and two daughters by her former husband, a poet named Keorapetse Kgositsile.

Her detractors describe her as authoritarian, autocratic and haughty. Last year, she suspended Mike Waters, an opposition MP, after he tried to ask questions about a theft conviction for Mr Mbeki's controversial health minister, Dr Manto Tshabalala-Msimang. "The queen of South Africa. That's the role she sees for herself," Mr Waters said.

In 1997, was she found to have acquired a driving licence fraudulently but was never prosecuted.

How reversal of fortunes in arms deal scandal led to change at the top

ALLEGATIONS that kickbacks were paid to top ANC figures by British and other European Union weapons manufacturers in connection with a £5.2 billion deal to renew South Africa's military arsenal were first made in 1999 by the feisty opposition MP Patricia de Lille.

She later received death threats and the parliamentary inquiry she demanded was turned down by the then vice-president, Jacob Zuma.

Andrew Feinstein, the ANC MP and public watchdog who put his safety and career on the line by supporting Ms de Lille, resigned in disgust and fled to Britain. Mr Zuma poured scorn on him, accusing him of "besmirching the good name" of the world's leading arms companies and of showing contempt for the foreign governments who had underpinned their deals.

When Mr Zuma's close friend and financial adviser, Schabir Shaik, was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment on charges of fraud and corruption in connection with the arms deal, the vice-president's name ran like a silver thread through the charge sheets. The judge concluded that Shaik had paid nearly 800 bribes to Mr Zuma and that the vice-president had sought an annual retainer from a French arms company to suppress parliamentary inquiries and to promote the company's interests in cabinet.

Thabo Mbeki sacked Mr Zuma, and protracted efforts to prosecute him began, ending with the contentious 200-page dismissal 12 days ago by Judge Chris Nicholson of the Zuma prosecution on technical grounds and on the suspicion that Mr Mbeki may have illegally intervened in the prosecution process.

Fortunes were dramatically reversed. Mr Zuma, who had seemed set to face destruction by the arms scandal, was on his way to become president of South Africa, and Mr Mbeki was on his way out.

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 September 2008 12:39 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Tatties ower the side,

Johannesburg 22/09/2008 05:51:00
Here is what the South African Sunday Times had to say about Mbeki yesterday:-

"Mbeki's greed for power, his determination to make his personal beliefs government policy, his disrespect for state institutions, his chronic denialism and his tolerance for the incompetence and corruption of his accolytes have destroyed the moral and political fabric of our society..... He was a bad president. ...."

Just about sums it up.....
2

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 22/09/2008 06:20:36
Mbeki is yesterday's news and good riddance to bad rubbish.

He now joins the league of discredited political monsters such as Mugabe (his close personal friend), Saddam Hussein, Bokassa, Amin, etc.

He is in "good" company, non?

South Africa should be ecstastic over his ouster and the end - hopefully - to any more corrupt and despicable regimes.

But I am in some doubt as these notorious and murderous "governments" seem to be self-perpetuating.

Sigh.
3

Boy Wonder,

22/09/2008 07:47:47
Mbeke had to go ... but Zuma is the wrong one to become President! Okay, you don't want (and will never get) an absolutely perfect person to become a country's leader ... but someone a lot less corrupt than Zuma would be preferable!
4

T-bird,

Sydney, Australia 22/09/2008 07:53:24
I agree with you all, but definately with you Boy Wonder. Zuma is the last person South Africa needs as a president. He is much worse than Mbeki. No wonder Mbeki was trying to get rid of him. I can't believe the ANC is so stupid to vote that man in. He is worse than Hitler, watch....
How can you make a man president who sleeps with a HIV women (O, and knowing she is HIV) with no protection and just saying to the nation that that is okay, because I took a shower afterwards. What an idiot.
5

collins,

ul 22/09/2008 09:18:52
i'm extremely concerned by the resignation of mr mbeki.it is an obvious case that zuma and HIS only two sons Malema and Mbalula ARE more excited like nothing.this is a sad story, especially because we are losing a leaders.south africa where are you going?why are you fooled by malema who don't know standard B, THIS GUY RAN FROM SCHOOL LONG TIME AGO, AND HE NOW CLAIM TO BE THE ANC YOUTH LEAGUE LEADER, WHO INSULT OUR PEOPLE . MR MBEKI INTRODUCE YOUR NEW ORGANISATION, WE WILL FOLLOW YOU.
6

collins,

22/09/2008 09:28:32
*Please enter your comment*
7

Dorian,

Edinburgh 22/09/2008 12:56:15
Jacob Zuma is as about as corrupt as you can get in South Africa, but that is the way it has been going for a long time. I am glad I left when I did and have never looked back. Watch and see what happens to the country when Jacob Zuma gets his grubby little hands on it. If you are living in South Africa and can leave, get out as soon as possible, it is going to go further round the u-bend.
8

,

22/09/2008 15:07:47
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
9

suchaparcelofrogues,

Scotland 22/09/2008 19:53:27
Good riddance to a useless jellyfish of a politician.
Nothing but a crutch for Mugabe.
He gives corruption a bad name.
10

Media 1,

cape town 22/09/2008 19:54:25
Grim reading, but not entirely true!
First things first, both Zuma and Mbeki and around 71% of the ANC members of parliament are corrupt. There have been to many to mention in terms of incompetence, corruption charges and fraudulent behaviour.

Judge Nicholson did not blame Mbeki, nor did he vindicate Zuma. What he said was, there had been political interference and a fair trial would not be possible. He also said that an investigation into the arms deal was necessary in order to get to the bottom of the dirty and utterly shocking arms deal saga.

Mbeki benefited from the arms deal as did Zuma and a glut of other ANC officials. They all stole from the fiscal, they all turned their backs on the people, but none of them are brave enough to face the music.

Mbeki had to go or he and the rest would be found out! He struck a deal and bought silence, so did the others.

Where is SA going? Who knows, but since 1994 we have all known that it was only a matter of time before the whole thing went t!t$ up. A few years still before that happens, but happen it will!! Africa is Africa is Africa.
11

El Sabio,

Sibbertoft 23/09/2008 08:58:35
To quote Churchill:

This is not the end, nor is it the beginning of the end but it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning.

#7 Dorian you can gloat. One never knows how things will end!
12

Mashimaro,

China 25/09/2008 01:31:35
Well one thing about Mbeki was that he did grow the SA economy.

 

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