UAE Court Dismisses S Africa Request to Extradite Gupta Brothers of
Saharanpur
·
Arrest in UAE Continues
The Guptas, arrested in the UAE in
2022, are accused of siphoning state funds using connections with ex-President
Zuma.
A United
Arab Emirates court has dismissed South Africa’s request to extradite Atul and Rajesh
Gupta, brothers who face charges of political corruption, Justice Minister Ronald
Lamola said on Friday.
The Indian
brothers, arrested in the UAE in June 2022, are accused of using their connections
with Jacob Zuma, president of South Africa from 2009 to 2018, to win contracts,
influence cabinet appointments and siphon off state funds. Zuma and the Guptas have
denied all wrongdoing.
South
Africa received diplomatic communication from the UAE on April 6 that a court there
had made the decision on February 13, said Lamola who
accused the UAE of “non-cooperation”.
“In the
evening of the 6th of April 2023, we were provided with a note verbale from the
UAE in which we learnt with shock and dismay that an extradition hearing had been
concluded in the UAE courts on the 13th of February 2023 and our extradition request
was unsuccessful,” Lamola told reporters.
The court
had ruled that the UAE had jurisdiction to prosecute the Guptas for money laundering
offences allegedly committed in the UAE and South Africa, Lamola
said.
He added
that South Africa would “promptly appeal” the decision.
Cathleen
Powell, associate professor of public law at Cape Town University, told Al Jazeera
that there is frustration in the country about how slow the extradition process
and “recovering what has been lost” has been, because of the daily impact of corruption
in South Africa.
“There
will be a lot of anger that the UAE has refused to extradite the Guptas and a lot
of that anger will be directed at South Africa [authorities] rather than the UAE,”
she said on Friday.
An inquiry
was established in 2018 to examine allegations of corruption during Zuma’s nine
years in power from 2009, which was riddled with scandals, overshadowing his presidency.
In July
2021, Interpol issued a red notice, a global alert enabling law enforcement to arrest
a person sought for prosecution or to serve a custodial sentence, and arrest them
pending extradition, for the Guptas.
Interpol
said they were being sought in connection with a 25 million rand ($1.6m) contract
paid to a Gupta-linked company, Nulane Investment, to
conduct an agricultural feasibility study