Friday, 8 April 2016

S’African Govt To Appeal Bashir Ruling At Highest Court


South Africa’s government will appeal at the constitutional court a ruling that the state made an error in letting Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir leave the country, the justice ministry said on Friday.

Bashir, who was in South Africa for an African Union summit last June, was allowed to go even though a court had issued an order banning him from leaving until the end of a hearing on whether he should be detained under a global arrest warrant.

The court said he should have been arrested to face genocide charges at the International Criminal Court (ICC) because as an ICC signatory, Pretoria is obliged to implement arrest warrants.

The government says diplomatic immunity was granted to all delegates at the summit.

South Africa’s government lost an appeal against the ruling at the Supreme Court (SCA) in March. The Constitutional Court offers the state its last chance of overturning the ruling.

“Government has today filed for leave to appeal to the Constitutional Court against the judgment delivered by Supreme Court,” the justice ministry said in a statement.

“We believe that the legal uncertainties … can be properly pronounced on by the Constitutional Court. Government therefore believes that there is a reasonable possibility that the Court will arrive at a different conclusion.”

In the aftermath of the initial court ruling, the governing African National Congress party said South Africa should withdraw from the ICC, which African states have accused of bias against the continent, reports Reuters.

Meanwhile, President Jacob Zuma’s son, Duduzane, and members of the Gupta family resigned from a South African mining firm on Friday citing “a sustained political attack”, the company said on Friday.

Oakbay Resources said in a statement that non-executive Chairman, Atul Gupta, and CEO, Varun Gupta, had also resigned with immediate effect. Duduzane Zuma resigned as a non-executive director of Shiva Uranium, a major subsidiary of the company.

“This decision follows a sustained political attack on the Company, and the concern that the jobs and livelihoods of nearly one thousand employees would be at immediate risk as a result of the outgoing director’s association with the company,” Oakbay Resources said in a statement.

A number of South African companies, including First National Bank (FNB), Barclays Africa, KPMG and Sasfin have closed the accounts of Oakbay Investments, the holding company for the Gupta family’s businesses, following allegations over their relationship with President Zuma.

Allegations of the Guptas meddling in politics surfaced last month, when deputy finance Minister said they may have had a hand in Zuma sacking his finance minister Nhlanhla Nene.

Zuma has denied numerous allegations of the Guptas wielding undue influence. The Guptas have also dismissed reports of their alleged influence, saying they are pawns in a political plot to get Zuma out of office.