Tag: Jacob Zuma

  • Jacob Zuma moved to an outside hospital for ‘routine observation’

    Jacob Zuma moved to an outside hospital for ‘routine observation’

    Jacob Zuma moved to an outside hospital for ‘routine observation’, says prison authority

    Jacob Zuma

    Former president Jacob Zuma. File photo. 
    Image: Rogan Ward

    The department of correctional services said on Friday that former president Jacob Zuma has been admitted to an outside hospital for medical observation.

    Zuma, who was sentenced last month to a 15-month jail term for contempt of court, has been medically supervised by staff from the SA Military Health Services since his admission at the Estcourt Correctional Centre.

    “A routine observation prompted that Mr Zuma be taken for in-hospitalisation,” said spokesperson Singabakho Nxumalo.

    SEE ALSO: Former SA President Jacob Zuma to be allowed out of prison for trial

    The JGZ Foundation, which speaks on behalf of the former president and his family, downplayed Zuma’s move from the prison to hospital.

    In a short statement posted on its social media page, the foundation said the 79–year-old Zuma “is attending to his annual medical routine check-up. No need to be alarmed … yet.”

    Zuma began serving the prison sentence on July 8 on the order of the Constitutional Court after repeatedly snubbing a call to appear at the commission of inquiry into state capture. He is classified as a “short-term low-risk inmate”.

    Two weeks ago, he joined his family for the funeral of his brother Michael, in Nkandla, after he was granted compassionate leave.

    When asked how Zuma was doing in jail, his son Edward said at the time that while there were a few things his father was not happy with, he was doing well. “He is in top spirits.”

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  • Former SA President Jacob Zuma to be allowed out of prison for trial

    Former SA President Jacob Zuma to be allowed out of prison for trial

    Former South African President Jacob Zuma will be allowed out of the prison to appear in person before the commission of inquiry on state capture.

    Zuma is expected to appear before a Pietermaritzburg court next week Tuesday.

    In a court order dated 4 August, Koen said the hearing will be conducted “in open court at the High Court in Pietermaritzburg”.

    Zuma’s lawyers have been adamant fighting for him to appear in court claiming it was a violation to virtually appear for the hearing.

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    “To do so would be unconstitutional and illegal, irrespective of the situation in a particular case, a particular date or the particular circumstance which may or may not prevail on 9 August 2021,” his lawyer said in a short two-page submission to the court.

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    The judge later turned the earlier ruling that the inquiry could be done virtually since no evidence was to be presented.

    “The currently applicable Disaster Management (Covid) regulations, particularly those regarding the wearing of face masks, maintaining social distance, and the restrictions on the numbers of attendees at indoor venues, must at all times be adhered to strictly,” Judge Piet Koen said.

    Former-president-Jacob-Zuma-Picture-Leon-Lestrade-African-News-Agency

    Zuma is currently serving a 15-month sentence for defying an order from the Constitutional Court, the country’s highest court, that he should testify at the commission of inquiry probing allegations of corruption during his term as president from 2009 to 2018.

    The start of Zuma’s imprisonment on July 8 sparked off protests which quickly escalated into violent riots in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng provinces that lasted a week.

    The death toll in the unrest has risen to 337, and police are investigating 213 of those for murder, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, acting minister in the presidency, said Thursday. The rise in fatalities has been caused by people dying from serious injuries, she said.

    The police investigations indicate that many deaths may have been caused by shootings and other intentional acts. Amnesty International is also investigating the deaths.

    South Africa’s widespread poverty and inequality contributed to the wave of unrest which saw widespread ransacking of shopping centers, the burning of freight trucks, and the barricading of two of the country’s major highways.

    Source: africanews // Shop@torsaa