“I would have to die first before they arrest him”

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South Africa’s ex-president Jacob Zuma on Friday mounted a last-ditch legal bid to avoid prison after the country’s top court ordered him jailed for failing to appear before graft investigators.

Zuma’s son Edward vowed he would not allow anyone to arrest his father, telling AFP, “I would have to die first before they arrest him.”

He described the court’s ruling as “very reckless, a decision which has plunged the country into crisis, a decision that is going to plunge the country into a war”.

In a landmark ruling, the Constitutional Court on Tuesday handed Zuma a 15-month term for contempt after he snubbed a probe into the theft of state assets under his tenure.

If the 79-year-old fails to turn himself in by Sunday, police will be given a further three days to arrest him and take him to jail to start the sentence.

As the deadline loomed, Zuma pleaded on Friday that the order be “reconsidered and rescinded.”

“It will not be futile,” Zuma said in papers filed to the court, “to make one last attempt to invite the Constitutional Court to relook its decision and to merely reassess whether it has acted within the constitution or, erroneously, beyond the powers vested in the court by the constitution.”

He cited his “own unstable state of health… it is my physical life that the incarceration order threatens.”

He said it was “no exaggeration to label (the ruling) as cruel and degrading punishment.”

In this light, Zuma argued, he believed he was entitled to a court that would examine his request “with dispassionate interest but a keen sense of judicial duty and independence.”

Zuma’s attempts to get the judges to “change their minds” is futile, according to Cathleen Powell, a University of Cape Town law professor. “It has no chance of happening.”

According to a copy of a warrant of committal seen on Friday, Zuma would be taken to Westville Prison in southeastern Kwa-Zulu Natal province.

Meantime about 100 supporters gathered in a show of solidarity on Friday outside Zuma’s rural home at Nkandla, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) north of Durban.

“We support Zuma and we want to know what is going to happen with him, which is why we are here,” 43-year-old Cecilia Nongce told AFP, wearing a traditional Nguni blue-and-red blanket to ward off the cold.

“We love Nxamala,” she said in Zulu, referring to Zuma by his clan name.

Other supporters waved ANC flags and wore white T-shirts with the inscription ‘wenzeni uZuma’, Zulu for “What has Zuma done?”