South Africa’s former President Jacob Zuma is free to run in May’s general election after an electoral court overturned a ban on his candidacy.
Last month the electoral commission barred him over a contempt of court conviction.
It argued the constitution prevented people from holding public office if convicted of a crime and sentenced to more than 12 months in prison.
Mr Zuma, 81, has been campaigning for the new uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party.
A former stalwart of the governing African National Congress (ANC), he is a controversial figure and served as president from 2009 until 2018, when he had to step down because of corruption allegations.
He was sentenced to 15 months in jail in 2021 for failing to testify in a corruption investigation, though he only served three months on health grounds.
The ruling could have a significant impact on the outcome of next month’s election.
Mr Zuma is the face of a newly formed MK opposition party, which is named after the ANC’s former military wing.
The ex-president sees himself as the true heir to the revolutionary roots of ANC, once led by Nelson Mandela.
Mr Zuma’s court victory means he can now run as the MK’s leading candidate.
Rather than voting directly for a president, South Africans elect members of the National Assembly. The head of whichever party can muster a majority is likely to become the country’s leader, though it could put forward another candidate.
The ruling will also be a blow to the ANC, which after 30 years in power, faces a potentially bruising election.
For the first time since the start of the democratic era in 1994, the ANC’s vote share could fall below 50%, several opinion polls predict.
The MK party is seen as popular in Mr Zuma’s home region of KwaZulu-Natal.
Zuma began engaging in anti-apartheid politics at an early age and joined the ANC in 1959. He became an active member of uMkhonto we Sizwe in 1962, two years after the ANC was banned. That year, he was arrested with a group of 45 recruits near Zeerust in western Transvaal, currently part of the North West Province.
His father, Nobhekisisa, was a policeman who died when Zuma was five, and his mother, Geinamazwi, was a domestic worker. His middle name, Gedleyihlekisa, means “one who smiles while causing you harm” in Zulu. He did not receive formal schooling.
Jacob Zuma (born April 12, 1942, Nkandla, South Africa) politician who served as President President of South Africa from 2021 until he resigned under pressure in 2018. He also had served as the Country’s deputy president (1999–2005) and as deputy president (1997–2007) and president (2007–17) of the country’s ruling party, the African National Congress (ANC