DA leader Helen Zille had the infamous spy tapes in her hands for 15 minutes. But she left the high court in Pretoria without them nonetheless.
With Zuma’s power waning, we should not be surprised that there’s been another purge of the country’s top spooks.
A triumphant Democratic Alliance has the infamous Jacob Zuma spy tapes, but can’t share the contents with the general public.
Are there any remaining legal avenues left for President Jacob Zuma to prevent the release of the so-called spy tapes?
The ANC has ‘noted’ the ruling for the NPA to hand over the spy tapes and the DA said it would review them thoroughly to establish authenticity.
The Supreme Court of Appeal has denied the president’s application to keep the spy tapes from being released to the Democratic Alliance.
Whatever his shortcomings and challenges like Nkandla and the EFF, President Jacob Zuma can rely on his secure position in the ANC to see him through.
A court agreement signed over spy tape records by legal teams for the president and DA leaves no room for political interference.
A SCA court official has confirmed that papers were sent to the court by Friday’s 4pm deadline in the matter between President Jacob Zuma and the DA.
President Jacob Zuma’s lengthy fight to block the release of the so-called ‘spy tapes’ suggests a cover-up, says opposition leader Helen Zille.
President Jacob Zuma and the DA have agreed to allow a third party to judge which documents formed part of Zuma’s confidential representations.
The point about secret information is: it is shared away from the glare of accountability. It doesn’t need to be true; it only needs to be believed.
Explosive new evidence has come to light of how crime intelligence systematically targeted top NPA officials.
The search came just hours before President Jacob Zuma questioned NPA chief Mxolisi Nxasana’s fitness to hold office.
From Julius Malema to the elections and Oscar Pistorius, here are nine stories on the M&G’s radar set to make headlines in 2014.
Michael Hulley, the lawyer who helped get corruption charges dropped against President Jacob Zuma in 2009, is being paid close to R700 an hour.
Jacob Zuma’s good-news philosophy is costing us lives, writes Verashni Pillay, in the wake of the Kenya attack and the release of the crime stats.
President Jacob Zuma has been granted leave to appeal by the South Gauteng High Court against the order to release the spy tapes.
The continued cover-up reveals the precariousness of the National Prosecuting Authority’s Jacob Zuma ruling.
The National Prosecuting Authority team told its boss, Mokotedi Mpshe, that the case against President Jacob Zuma merited prosecution.
The inkling that former Scorpions head Leonard McCarthy was under surveillance came when the M&G revealed police had monitored his conversations.
The prosecutorial team was ready to move on Jacob Zuma, but the acting Nation Prosecuting Authority boss seemed to drag his feet.
The spy tapes have been a part of a situation in which one legal dodge led to another, and everyone ended up compromised.
The DA says they will oppose Zuma’s appeal of the High Court decision forcing the National Prosecuting Authority to hand over the so-called spy tapes.
The court ruling that the acting NPA head must lodge a copy of the Zuma spy tapes with the court registrar is a victory for democracy, says the DA.
Judge Rammak Mathopo has a big task: to decide if the spy tapes should be handed over to the DA and whether the NPA is in contempt of court.
Judgment has been reserved in the North Gauteng High Court on the release of the so-called Zuma spy tapes.
The so-called Zuma spy tapes are not confidential and should be released, the Democratic Alliance has told the North Gauteng Court.
The DA will try to force a court order on the NPA to turn in records, including the spy tapes, that led to charges against Jacob Zuma being dropped.
The intelligence services may be worse off now than we were during the most precarious moments of the Zuma/Mbeki transition.
The ANC’s latest PR stunt involving Nelson Mandela backfires, the secrecy Bill gets passed and the spy tapes saga continues.
The DA says Deputy Judge President Willem van der Merwe has instructed that the continued spy tapes battle be heard before a full Bench of judges.