President Robert Mugabe called for the lifting of "illegally imposed sanctions" on his
regime.
Zuma: Hlophe implicated
Article By:
Fri, 30 May 2008 19:06
Cape Judge President John Hlophe has been accused of attempting to
influence the Constitutional Court's decision on search and seizure
raids carried out by the Scorpions on properties of Jacob Zuma and
French arms manufacturing giant Thint.
A Concourt statement released on Friday afternoon said that a
complaint had been referred to the Judicial Services Commission (JSC)
following allegations that "Judge John Hlophe has approached some of
the judges of the Constitutional Court in an improper attempt to
influence this Court's pending judgment in one or more cases..."
The statement did not reveal which of the 11 Concourt judges had
allegedly been approached by Hlophe. It did say that "the complaint
relates to the matters of Thint (Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public
Prosecutions and Others (CCT 89/07), JG Zuma and Another v National
Director of Public Prosecutions and Others (CCT 91/07), Thint Holdings
(South Africa) (Pty) Ltd and Another v
National Director of Public
Prosecutions (CCT 90/07) and JG Zuma v National Director of Public
Prosecutions (CCT 92/07)."
The cases were heard by the court in Johannesburg between 11 March
and 14 March and related to controversial search and seizure raids at
properties belonging to Zuma in Gauteng and KwaZulu-Natal, and at the
Durban office of his attorney Michael Hulley on 18 August 2005.
Properties belonging to Thint were also raided.
A ruling has yet to be made.
Zuma, Hulley and Thint have argued that they should be granted leave
to appeal a 8 November 2006, majority judgment of the Supreme Court of
Appeal that upheld the raids.
The raids were carried out two months after judge Hilary Squires
convicted Zuma's former confidante and financial adviser Schabir Shaik
on two counts of corruption and one of fraud in the Durban High Court.
The corruption charges related to Shaik's attempt to solicit a
R500,000 a year bribe from
Thint, the South African subsidiary of
Thales International (formerly Thomson CSF) for Zuma.
Hlophe could not be reached for comment. Sapa was told that he had
left his office in Cape Town and would only be available again on
Monday.
However, Cape Talk radio presenter John Maytham said on air that
Hlophe had spoken to a reporter for the station about the referral to
the JSC.
"He did deny it in the bluntest of terms and said he never
approached anybody," Maytham said.
The Concourt statement said: "We stress that there is no suggestion
that any of the litigants in the cases referred to... was aware of or
instigated this action."
It further said: "The judges of this Court view conduct of this
nature in a very serious light."
National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Tlali Tlali said he had not
seen the statement and could therefore not comment.
Advocate Rudi van Rooyen, the chairman of the Cape Bar Council, also
said he
could not immediately comment, but that a statement would be
issued shortly.
He said the council was dealing with the matter, which it
"considered as one of extreme emergency and extreme concern".
Hulley said he had not seen the statement and that "I find the whole
thing a bit bizarre."
He said he would not be in a position to comment until the JSC had
released its findings and "when we know what the full nature of the
complaint is".
Leader of the Democratic Alliance Helen Zille said the allegation
"shakes the very foundations of our constitutional democracy".
"If the JSC confirms that Judge Hlophe abused his position in this
way, then he must be dismissed from the bench and face the full force
of the law," she said.
"The allegation raises the possibility that Judge Hlophe acted at
the behest either of Jacob Zuma or his political allies. This is not
implausible given Zuma’s numerous attempts to avoid justice to date.
The DA
will follow this line of questioning at the JSC to ascertain
whether or not Zuma or any of his representatives exerted pressure on
Judge Hlophe," she said.
JSC spokesperson Marumo Moerane said he could not immediately confirm
receipt of the complaint as he had just arrived back in the country.