I'm the Victim - Broken Shaik |
Publication | News24 |
Date |
2006-01-31 |
Reporter |
Adriaan Basson |
Web Link |
Johannesburg
- "I'm now the victim in Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma's political fight," said a
shattered Schabir Shaik on Tuesday, after Durban High Court ruled that the State
was entitled to confiscate assets to the value of R34m from him.
Shaik
spoke openly for the first time on Tuesday after a marathon legal process during
which he was convicted of corruption and fraud, sentenced to an effective 15
years in prison and has now lost millions of rands in assets.
Judge
Hilary Squires, who convicted Shaik on June 2 last year on two charges of
corruption and one of fraud, ruled on Tuesday that Shaik's corrupt relationship
with Zuma was worth R34m and that the State was entitled to every cent of
it.
The judgment also involved the dismissed
deputy-president far more closely in the French arms firm Thales's
decision to accept Shaik as its empowerment partner after initially kicking out
the Nkobi Group.
Squires rejected Shaik's argument that the court had
found Zuma's "intervention" to get Shaik back as partner was not illegal, and
said Shaik misunderstood his
judgment.
Zuma's 'general political status'
He had
found in June only that the State could not prove that Zuma had intervened in
his capacity as African National Congress deputy president when holding a
meeting with the Thales bosses.
Squires proceeded to rule that Shaik,
himself, had not distinguished between Zuma's different positions in his
payments to Zuma.
"His investment was in the general political status of
his client."
Even if the State argued that Shaik bribed the
deputy-president of the ANC, it would still be illegal, "especially when taking
into account the overwhelming political control that party enjoys over the
country's affairs".
Shaik accused Squires of contradicting his previous
judgment with Tuesday's judgment.
"First, he (Squires) found Zuma had
done nothing wrong by speaking to the French (Thales). Now
he changes his decision and finds Zuma guilty!
"The judge also
forgets that the French first sought the help of (former
president Nelson) Mandela and (President Thabo) Mbeki and only then spoke
with Zuma."
Shaik believes he has grounds to lodge an appeal against the
asset forfeiture order and will approach the Supreme Court of Appeal soon with
an application.
"On a personal level, I now feel like the victim in Mbeki
and Zuma's political fight.
'Root out corruption openly'
"Why is there silence about the other contracts in the arms
transaction?
"That's not what we fought for. I agree that
corruption must be rooted out, but do it openly and
transparently."
Shaik repeated the accusations of staunch Zuma supporters
such as the Congress of South African Trade Unions, the ANC Youth League and the
SA Communist Party, that organs of state were being misused to "eliminate people
on Zuma's side".
"My life goes on, but this evil must stop."
With acknowledgements to Adriaan Basson and News24.