The corruption trial of Jacob Zuma, leader of the African National Congress (ANC), was unlikely to take place any earlier than the already scheduled August starting date, his lawyer, Michael Hulley, said on Thursday.
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) said this week it was prepared to proceed with the case early if Zuma wished.
”I don’t think that there is any likelihood that it will be sooner than [August],” Hulley told Talk Radio 702 in an interview.
Zuma, who won the ANC leadership in an election contest last month against the incumbent, national President Thabo Mbeki, has been charged with corruption, fraud, money laundering and racketeering.
The trial is set to start on August 4 and could overlap with national elections in 2009, adding to political uncertainty in Africa’s biggest economy.
Zuma’s supporters say the charges are meant to smear his name, coming barely two weeks after his victory to take the helm of the ANC, and to scupper his chances of succeeding Mbeki as state president.
Chaos
Meanwhile, the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) in KwaZulu-Natal has warned that the country would be thrown into chaos and that blood would ”be spilt” following the charges brought against Zuma, the Sowetan reported on Thursday.
The NPA filed the indictment on Zuma last week and he faces 16 charges in total.
Cosatu’s provincial leader, Zet Luzipho, warned that there was growing anger from the people on the ground, especially in KwaZulu-Natal where Zuma has his biggest support base.
”People are now angry. This time there will be blood spilt in the courtroom. People are ready to put themselves in the frontline. We will not be held responsible for their anger,” he told the Sowetan.
During Zuma’s previous court appearances, thousands of supporters showed up at the court.
Luzipho said the latest string of charges against Zuma smacked of a ”political conspiracy” by those ”who lost the political contest in Limpopo”.
He said he was saddened by the latest developments because ”many of us saw Limpopo as an equal contest and not as a platform to create further enemies”.
He said the actions against Zuma further divided the ANC.
”It is divisive and will plunge our country into chaos. As much as the NPA says this is an independent undertaking, it confirms to us that state machinery is again being used for political gain,” he told the Sowetan.
However, NPA spokesperson Tlali Tlali said on Tuesday: ”The NPA is sensitive to the controversy which this decision evokes. We are also aware of claims that the NPA is being misused to advance the political and other objectives of certain individuals. This is not so.” — Reuters, Sapa