, ,

Family in South African scandal says it is a scapegoat

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Villain or scapegoat? A wealthy business family in South Africa that has been criticized for allegedly improper links to President Jacob Zuma is trying to change the negative narrative. In a two-page spread Friday in a newspaper that it owns, the Gupta family denied it is corrupt but did not directly address…

Jacob Zuma
South African president Jacob Zuma, answers questions in parliament from the DA, Democratic Alliance political party in Cape Town, South Africa, Thursday, March 17, 2016. In a tumultuous session of Parliament on Thursday, South Africa’s president rejected allegations that he is influenced by a wealthy business family, saying that he is in charge of the appointment of Cabinet ministers. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam)

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Villain or scapegoat? A wealthy business family in South Africa that has been criticized for allegedly improper links to President Jacob Zuma is trying to change the negative narrative.

In a two-page spread Friday in a newspaper that it owns, the Gupta family denied it is corrupt but did not directly address accusations that it tried to boost business by influencing some of Zuma’s choices for Cabinet posts, even allegedly offering the finance minister’s job to an official.

The allegations against the Guptas have fed into wider worries about corruption in South Africa, stirring debate about whether Zuma can ride out the scandal or will face increasing calls to resign as the government struggles to attract investment.

“As the global economic slowdown began to bite, the family became the scapegoat for every calamity and misfortune that South Africa has faced,” the Guptas said in The New Age newspaper.

The Indian immigrant family said Atul Gupta, who chairs holding company Oakbay Investments with his brother Ajay, arrived a year before white-minority rule ended in 1994, and helped build a new South Africa.

The family, which has interests in mining, engineering and the media, said its the target of “xenophobic and hate speech,” a grave allegation in a country grappling not just with its legacy of racial conflict but also periodic violence against immigrants.

The Gupta family’s “interaction” with Zuma began before he became president, and allegations of corruption are false, the statement said.

Zuma’s son, Duduzane, has business links to the Guptas, according to media reports.

Zuma’s relationship with the Guptas is front-page news here. Blending both names, a Mail and Guardian headline said: “Battle lines drawn: Zuptas vs the rest.”

___

Follow Christopher Torchia on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/torchiachris

 

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.