It took more than 5,000 pages to account for the extent of the machination mounted by the ex-president and a sulphurous sibling of businessmen: the conclusions of four years of investigation into state corruption in South Africa under the Zuma era were finally published on Wednesday 22 June.

After 400 days of hearings, more than 300 witnesses and the examination of hundreds of incriminating documents which led to the questioning of nearly 1,500 people by an ad hoc commission, chaired by Judge Raymond Zondo, the finding is overwhelming.

"'State capture' was a real attack on our democracy, it violated the rights of every man and woman in this country," President Cyril Ramaphosa said at the official report delivery in Pretoria, employing the term used in the country to refer to years of rampant corruption.

He had estimated the amounts embezzled at the equivalent of more than 30 billion euros.

Since January and the delivery of the first of six chapters, Judge Zondo has demonstrated, as new sections of the investigation are published, how ex-president Jacob Zuma, described as "the puppet" of the sulphurous trio of men of businessmen of Indian origin, the Guptas, siphoned off the state coffers.

The affair which has kept South Africans in suspense for several years with river hearings broadcast live on television, must now go to the judicial stage.

The commission has an advisory role but its conclusions can be forwarded to the public prosecutor's office.

Cyril Ramaphosa, who has sworn to eradicate corruption by succeeding Jacob Zuma, will announce in Parliament in four months the opening of possible proceedings.

Judge Zondo has already recommended the opening of legal proceedings against more than 130 people, including several former ministers.

"It has been a long road (...) There was a time when I was not sure that this day would come," he confessed when the report was delivered, referring to sleepless nights.

jerk

Jacob Zuma, 80, is now on medical parole, sentenced to 15 months in prison for stubbornly refusing to testify before the commission of inquiry.

His incarceration in July sparked an unprecedented wave of riots that left more than 350 people dead.

The final presentation of the report comes a few weeks after the arrest of two of the Gupta brothers, at the heart of the scandal.

Atul and Rajesh Gupta, targeted by an international arrest warrant from Interpol, were arrested in early June in Dubai.

The news caused a jolt in a South Africa benumbed by a disillusionment with the institutions, a justice deemed ineffective and a police deemed corrupt.

An extradition request is pending.

The wealthy family is accused of having infiltrated the top of the state thanks to its long friendship with Jacob Zuma: influence on the choice of ministers, pressure to pocket public contracts, looting of public companies (electricity, transport, aviation), before fleeing.  

Cyril Ramaphosa in turmoil

Managing to present the two arrested suspects before the South African justice would be a coup for Cyril Ramaphosa.

The report, however, suggests that the latter was himself passive as Jacob Zuma's vice president.

Some of his responses about what he knew about corrupt activities were "opaque" and "unfortunately leave significant gaps", according to the report.

Could he have acted against this corruption?

"The wealth of evidence available to this commission suggests that the answer is yes," the report said.

"Surely there was enough credible information in the public domain (...) to prompt him to at least investigate and perhaps act on a number of serious allegations."

And "as vice-president, he certainly had a responsibility to do so," the report also suggests.

The head of state, who is seeking an investiture to run for a new presidential term in 2024, is also the subject of a complaint filed in early June.

Former South African intelligence chief Arthur Fraser accuses him of concealing from the police and the tax authorities a 2020 burglary at one of his properties, during which large sums of cash, concealed in furniture, according to him were stolen.

At the head of a personal fortune, Cyril Ramaphosa, heckled during a recent appearance in Parliament, admitted that a sum had been stolen from him, while explaining that the money was drawn from the sale of animals of his farm north of Johannesburg.

The opposition is demanding that he withdraw to make way for an investigation.

With AFP

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