Dropping the charges against Zuma is irrational and unlawful
The reasons given by the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) for dropping the charges against Mr Jacob Zuma do not hold water. The DA is now finalising its plan to take the matter further through the legal system.
The decision to withdraw the charges does not appear to be rationally connected to the information before the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP). All indications are that the NDPP has not taken a decision based in law, but that it has buckled to political pressure. Two weeks before the election, it now portrays Jacob Zuma as a wronged victim in a show trial.
Firstly, the evidence presented by the NDPP today does not change the fact that there is a strong case against Zuma. That case must go to court. The evidence presented by the NDPP, which amounts to selective quotations from transcripts of bugged telephone conversations between the former head of the Scorpions, Leonard McCarthy, and the former head of the NPA, Bulelani Ngcuka, does not affect the substantive merits of the case against Zuma. It merely points to political manipulation in the timing of the NPA's decision to re-charge Zuma. By the NPA's own admission today, it does not detract from the case itself.
This evidence must be processed through the proper legal channels. It must be examined and cross-examined in court. If the individuals whose telephone calls were recorded are guilty of criminal conduct they must be charged too.
At the moment, we have the worst of all possible worlds, with selective prosecutions depending on who holds political office.