Our website use cookies to improve and personalize your experience and to display advertisements (if any). Our website may also include cookies from third parties like Google Adsense, Google Analytics, and Youtube. By using the website, you consent to the use of cookies.

“I’m innocent”, says ANC leader Magashule after being granted bail in graft case

ACE Magashule, the powerful ANC politician who is out on R200 000 bail after being charged with 21 counts of corruption, says he is innocent and the charges against him are trumped.

Hours after he appeared in court, Magashule, the ANC secretary-general, told ENCA TV that he was innocent. “I am not corrupt. I will never be corrupt,” Magashule said.

He said he will use his court case to expose how charges against him are trumped and the individuals behind the plot.

Magashule, the former premier of the Free State, said he would not step down from his role as secretary-general because he had been convicted of any wrongdoing by a court of law or asked to do so by ANC branches. 

Advertisements

Magashule, one of the top six most powerful officials of the ANC, faces allegations related to a contract to audit houses with asbestos roofs awarded while he was premier of the Free State province.

The charges have put him on a collision course with President Cyril Ramaphosa, who has pledged to clean up the ANC’s image with a tough stance on corruption, but whose detractors accuse him of using it to sideline his opponents.

Magistrate Amos Moos at the Bloemfontein Magistrate Court set the bail for Magashule at 200,000 rand ($12,823.72) and ordered him to appear before the court on Feb. 19.

READ:  ANC secretary-general should step aside, the party’s Integrity Commission rules

“We expect to add three more accused on the charge-sheet,” the National Prosecuting Authority said in a statement.

Outside the court, thousands of supporters denounced the trial as a witch hunt, chanting, dancing and waving banners reading “Hands off Comrade Magashule”, footage from national TV channels showed.

After appearing, Magashule, who had handed himself into the police in the morning, stepped outside to address the crowd. “I will only step aside if I am asked by the branches who voted for me,” he said, to loud applause.

Some protesters tried to tear down a barbed wire cordon around the court while others burned yellow ANC T-shirts bearing Ramaphosa’s face, calling on him to step down.

“If you arrest Ace Magashule, you arrest the whole ANC!” one demonstrator shouted.

Magashule is the most high-profile politician to be tried since former president Jacob Zuma, whose trial on graft charges resumes in December.

Magashule is from a faction within the governing party that has pushed radical economic transformation and has at times appeared at odds with the Ramaphosa since he replaced Zuma as head of state in February 2018.

“This is a stress test for the ANC,” said independent political analyst Daniel Silke. “Whilst there will be a pushback from those implicated in corruption…, (who) will try to factionalise the debate…, the president has sufficient strength within the broader ANC to withstand this.”

Advertisements

Tellingly, the ANC has not asked Magashule to step down because of the allegations.

READ:  40 witnesses, 70 charges against Magashule & Co

Speaking on state broadcaster SABC, ANC deputy secretary-general Jessie Duarte warned Magashule supporters, “while we are supporting (him), we should not do so by destroying the very movement that we want to change this country.” – Thomson Reuters Foundation and African Mirror Reporter.

Advertisements
By The African Mirror

MORE FROM THIS SECTION