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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Emma Rumney

South African court allows Zuma to appeal return-to-jail order

Former South African President Jacob Zuma sits in court during his corruption trial in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, October 26, 2021. Jerome Delay/Pool via REUTERS/Files

A South African court on Tuesday granted former president Jacob Zuma leave to appeal a ruling that he return to prison after being released in September on medical parole, meaning he will be able to spend Christmas at home.

Zuma, 79, was sentenced in June to 15 months in prison for contempt of court after ignoring instructions to participate in a corruption inquiry.

He handed himself in to begin his sentence on July 7, triggering some of the worst violence South Africa had seen in years. Anger from supporters snowballed into broader outrage over hardship and inequalities that persist 27 years after the end of apartheid.

Zuma began medical parole in September, but earlier this month South Africa's high court ordered that decision void and that he should return to jail - raising concerns about further violence.

That same court ruled on Tuesday his legal team should be able to appeal against the judgment at a higher court.

"In my view, this matter merits the Supreme Court of Appeal's attention," Judge Elias Matojane said.

He added there was a reasonable possibility another court may rule differently on the issue of whether Zuma's time on medical parole should count towards his sentence. Matojane previously ruled it should not.

"It means the court order cannot be enforced until the superior court hears the matter and makes a judgment," Department of Correctional Services spokesperson Singabakho Nxumalo told Reuters in a Whatsapp message.

The legal processes against Zuma for alleged corruption during his nine-year reign are widely viewed as a test of post-apartheid South Africa's ability to enforce the rule of law against powerful individuals.

Zuma's 2009-2018 presidency was marred by allegations of graft and wrongdoing, and he faces a separate corruption trial linked to his sacking as deputy president in 2005 when he was implicated in a $2 billion allegedly corrupt arms deal.

He denies wrongdoing in all cases and says he is the victim of a political witchhunt.

(Additional reporting by Olivia Kumwenda in Johannesburg; Editing by Tim Cocks and Nick Macfie)

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