South African president denies owning $25m 'palace' in Dubai
South African President Jacob Zuma has denied owning a
“palace” in the United Arab Emirates, his office said on Sunday, after
local media reported that an influential family bought him a home in the
wealthy Gulf state.
Graft accusations in more than 100,000 leaked documents and e-mails last week heaped more pressure on the scandal-plagued Zuma only days after he survived a no-confidence vote by members of his own party’s top body.
South Africa’s Sunday Times newspaper reported that several independent sources had told it that the Gupta family had bought Zuma a retirement home for 330 million rand ($25 million) in an upmarket suburb of Dubai.
The Gupta family, wealthy Indian-born businessmen whose companies have contracts with state-owned firms, have denied all allegations of influence-peddling or improper dealings and through a spokesman last week labelled the e-mails “fake news”.
“President Zuma does not own any property outside South Africa and has not requested anybody to buy property for him abroad,” his office said in a statement, adding that the report about a “palace” in Dubai was a “fabrication”.
“The president has also not received or seen the reported emails and has no knowledge of them,” his office said.
Graft accusations in more than 100,000 leaked documents and e-mails last week heaped more pressure on the scandal-plagued Zuma only days after he survived a no-confidence vote by members of his own party’s top body.
South Africa’s Sunday Times newspaper reported that several independent sources had told it that the Gupta family had bought Zuma a retirement home for 330 million rand ($25 million) in an upmarket suburb of Dubai.
The newspaper did not name the sources, but said they included businessmen, senior officials in the ruling African National Congress and people close to the Zuma family. It also cited some of the leaked e-mails.President Zuma does not own any property outside South Africa and has not requested anybody to buy property for him abroad.
The Gupta family, wealthy Indian-born businessmen whose companies have contracts with state-owned firms, have denied all allegations of influence-peddling or improper dealings and through a spokesman last week labelled the e-mails “fake news”.
“President Zuma does not own any property outside South Africa and has not requested anybody to buy property for him abroad,” his office said in a statement, adding that the report about a “palace” in Dubai was a “fabrication”.
“The president has also not received or seen the reported emails and has no knowledge of them,” his office said.
The story in the Sunday Times newspaper today, that President Jacob Zuma owns a "palace" in Dubai is a fabrication. https://t.co/ZVqqiNKnEu— PresidencyZA (@PresidencyZA) 4 June 2017
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