Mauritian Documents May Never Come Before Court |
Publication |
Sapa |
Issued | Johannesburg |
Reporter | Giordano Stolley |
Date | 2008-03-13 |
The documents the State is seeking to obtain from Mauritius may never be used
against African National Congress president Jacob Zuma, the Constitutional Court
heard on Thursday.
State advocate Wim Trengove said evidence gathered "does not automatically
become evidence before the court.
"Evidence becomes evidence that the State may or may not tender," he said.
The documents, about Zuma's role in the arms deal, include the 2000 diary of
Alain Thetard, former chief executive of Thales International's South African
subsidiary Thint (Pty) Ltd.
In April 2007, in the Durban High Court, Judge Phillip Levensohn authorised a
letter of request in terms of Section 2(2) of the International Co-operation in
Criminal (ICC) Matters Act, which both Zuma and Thint are appealing.
Trengove rejected the assertion, by Zuma and Thint's legal teams, that the State
was not entitled to the letter of request because the National Prosecuting
Authority (NPA) already had copies of the documents --obtained prior to the 2005
corruption trial of Zuma's former financial adviser Schabir Shaik.
He also rejected the assertion that information gathered in terms of Section
2(2) of the ICC Act could not be used in a criminal trial.
Trengove said that if Section 2(2) was not used to obtain the documents, the
State would have to wait for Zuma's trial to begin before attempting to obtain
the documents -- and then possibly seek another adjournment while the court
waited for the documents.
Kemp argued on Wednesday that the NPA was not entitled to use that section of
the Act to obtain the documents.
Zuma's advocate Kemp J Kemp said on Wednesday that allowing the documents from
Mauritius to be "imported" would "negate" Zuma's legal team's ability to
challenge the documents in the court.
Kemp said: "We want someone to testify about those documents so that we can
cross-examine them."
Zuma did not arrive at the Constitutional Court on Thursday for the third and
probably final day of the hearings into his application.
Pierre Moynot, Thint's chief executive, sat alone behind their legal teams.
Originally, only two days were set aside for the hearing of Zuma's challenge of
the November 8 Supreme Court of Appeal ruling, but on Wednesday night Chief
Justice Pius Langa ordered that the court reconvene on Thursday to finish
proceedings.
Only a small contingent of journalists and press photographers was present at
the start of Thursday's hearing.
On Wednesday, the court reserved judgment on Thint and Zuma's appeal to have
August 2005 search and seizure raids declared invalid.
With acknowledgements to Giordano Stolley and Sapa.