The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) has dismissed a bid by
former president Jacob Zuma to appeal against a high court ruling that found he
had defamed former minister Derek Hanekom by calling him a “known enemy agent”
on Twitter.
BusinessLIVE reported on
Thursday that Zuma’s application to the SCA was “dismissed with costs on the
grounds that there was no reasonable prospect of success”.
Durban high court judge Dhaya Pillay had in September 2019
ordered Zuma to remove the tweet and publish an apology within 24 hours.
Hanekom, the former tourism minister - in Zuma's
administration – sued Zuma for R500,000 in damages after the former president
tweeted in July 2019 that he was a “known enemy agent”, TimesLIVE reported
previously.
Hanekom said this had caused him “immense harm and damage”,
giving the impression that he was an apartheid spy.
Zuma in turn argued, in an affidavit, that there were
“common cause events” that demonstrated Hanekom had “colluded with opposition
parties that sought to remove me as president”.
The tweet by Zuma was in response to EFF leader Julius
Malema having revealed that Hanekom had met with the red berets to plot a plan
to "oust Zuma" from office.
Judge Pillay said in the 2019 ruling that the litigation
between them was a proxy for the internal conflict within the ANC.
“Lawfare is a consequence of the failure of dialogue and
politics ... it is a battle or skirmish in the overall war for dominance and
control by one or other faction. The courts will resolve this dispute, but it
would take much more to resolve the conflict,” said Pillay.
-TimesLIVE
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