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JOHANNESBURG, June 14 (Xinhuanet) -- South African President Thabo Mbeki Tuesday released his
corruption-tainted deputy Jacob Zuma of his duties.
Mbeki made the announcement during a
special joint sitting of the two Houses of Parliament in Cape Town on Tuesday
afternoon.
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| President Thabo Mbeki (L) shares a
joke with Deputy President Jacob Zuma after Mbeki's first address to the
country's Parliament as President in this June 25, 1999 file photo.
(Reuters) | The president
axed the man he appointed as his second-in-command in 1999 and again in 2004.
This came almost two weeks after
Zuma was implicated in corruption during the Durban High Court trial of
businessman Schabir Shaik, who acted as his financial advisor.
Last week Judge Hilary Squires
sentenced Durban businessman Schabir Shaik, who acted as financial adviser to
Zuma, to 15 years in prison for fraud and corruption.
Shaik was sentenced to 15 years in
jail on Wednesday last week after being convicted of fraud and theft involving
improper financial dealings with the deputy president.
Judge Hilary Squires ruled that the
men had a "generally corrupt" relationship, and found Shaik guilty of soliciting
a 500,000 rand-a-year bribe for Zuma from French arms company Thomson-CSF in
return for protection from a probe into South Africa's multi-billion rand arms
deal.
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| Picture dated June 8 shows Jacob
Zuma replying to a parliamentary question.
(AFP/File) |
Mbeki's decision to fire Zuma
followed a meeting of the African National Congress' extended national working
committee at its headquarters at Luthuli House in Johannesburg on Monday. This
had followed Mbeki's consultations with senior party leaders, including those in
the provinces.
Zuma declined to resign last week,
forcing the president to fire him. In terms of the constitution, the president
has the prerogative to dismiss members of the cabinet. It is not the first time
that a democratic president has moved against members of his executive, but Zuma
is certainly the most senior member of government to go.
In 1995, then president Nelson
Mandela fired his estranged wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, as deputy arts and
culture minister, and a year later, Bantu Holomisa lost his job as deputy
environment minister in a "cabinet reshuffle."
It was followed by an ANC
disciplinary process where Holomisa was accused of bringing the ANC into
disrepute after alleging that a cabinet colleague, Stella Sigcau, was guilty of
corruption while she was a homeland leader.
It is expected that Zuma will be
replaced by ANC national chairperson Mosiuoa Lekota, although Foreign Affairs
Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma has also been mentioned. Zuma's axing may also
involve a cabinet shuffle. Enditem |