The South Africa Supreme Court of Appeal has ordered that former President Jacob Zuma should be returned to prison after ruling that the medical parole that qualified him for a early release from his 15 months jail sentence was unlawfully obtained.
The court, in a ruling on Monday, said Zuma should be returned to prison to to finish his sentence for contempt of court.
In July, 2021, the former President was sentenced to 15 months imprisonment after repeatedly ignoring a court order to testify at a government inquiry into large scale corruption during his tenure as president.
However, in September, two months after, Zuma was released on medical parole, but in December, the high court set aside the parole decision and ordered him to return to jail.
Zuma went on to appeal the high court decision at the Supreme Court and in the judgment delivered on Monday, a month after the department of correctional services said his prison sentence had ended, the court ordered that he must go back to prison to see out his term.
The court also took issue with the department’s claim that Zuma’s sentence had ended while the appeal was still being heard, and held that it found the decision by the former National Commissioner of Correctional Services to grant Zuma medical parole against the advice of the Medical Parole Advisory Board, a specialist body, unlawful.
“On any conceivable basis, the commissioner’s decision was unlawful and unconstitutional. The high court was correct to set it aside.
“In other words, Mr Zuma, in law, has not finished serving his sentence. He must return to the Escourt Correctional centre to do so,” the Supreme Court of Appeal’s judgment read.