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Former South African President Zuma Pleads Not Guilty to Corruption Charges

VOA News

   Former South African President Jacob Zuma pleaded not guilty to
   corruption charges Wednesday in a trial that began more than a quarter
   century ago after some of the alleged crimes were committed.
   Zuma, 79, is being tried on multiple counts of corruption, fraud, money
   laundering and racketeering charges linked to a 1999 $2 billion arms
   deal when he was deputy president.
   Zuma, who faces a 25-year prison term if convicted, was president from
   2009 until he was forced out of office in 2018 during multiple
   political corruption scandals.
   He has maintained he is the target of a politically motivated witch
   hunt by a rival faction of the ruling African National Congress.
   One of the charges accuses Zuma of accepting bribes from Thales, a
   French multinational company, to guarantee South Africa signed the arms
   deal with the company in 1999.
   Prosecutors have also launched a separate probe into allegations that
   Zuma accepted $34,000 annually from Thales to protect the company from
   an investigation into the agreement.
   Thales, known as Thomson-CSF when the deal was reached, said it was
   unaware of any offenses committed by any of its employees. A company
   representative pleaded not guilty to the racketeering, corruption and
   money laundering charges the company faces.
   Prosecutors filed charges against Zuma more than a decade ago but
   decided just before his successful 2009 presidential campaign not to
   pursue them. Prosecutors reinstated the charges a month after Zuma
   stepped down in early 2018.
   On Wednesday, Zuma's lawyer filed papers in Pietermaritzburg High Court
   calling for the removal of chief prosecutor Billy Downer. They claimed
   Downer is biased and that Zuma's right to a fair trial was at risk. The
   judge said he would consider the request.