Former South African president Thabo Mbeki intends taking to the Supreme
Court his challenge against a judgment that inferred he politically meddled in
the NPA's investigation of ANC president Jacob Zuma, his spokesman
said today.
This follows the failure on Monday of Mbeki's bid to have the ruling revoked
in the Constitutional Court. The court dismissed his application, saying it was
"not in the interests of justice" to hear it at this stage.
"This is a continuation of the earlier process which involved government
approaching the Constitutional Court," said Mbeki's spokesman Mukoni
Ratshitanga.
"The Constitutional Court as you know has made a pronouncement with regard to
the government's approach to it. Instead of approaching the Constitutional
Court, the process is going to the Supreme Court of Appeal."
He could not say when Mbeki's lawyers would file papers at the Supreme Court,
saying only that "a decision has already been taken in that regard".
Mbeki on Monday was appealing against "certain findings" by Pietermaritzburg
High Court Judge Chris Nicholson that he could not exclude the possibility of
political interference in the decision to charge Zuma with fraud and corruption.
In Mbeki's urgent application for direct access to the court, he had hoped to
argue that the findings of political meddling were made without affording him a
hearing and constituted a violation of his constitutional rights.
He had hoped to set aside the "unfair and unjust" findings in the judgment
concerning himself or any member of the national executive who were not afforded
a hearing in the Zuma matter.