South Africa
South African prosecutors said Monday they intend to charge the Parliament speaker with corruption, alleging she took $135,000 and a wig in bribes over three years while she was defence minister.
Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula has not been arrested or charged. The prosecutors spoke at a court hearing over her claims that authorities hadn't properly informed her of allegations or followed the correct procedure.
The judge was expected to rule on a stay of arrest later Monday.
In court papers submitted for the hearing, prosecutors say Mapisa-Nqakula received 11 payments totalling $135,000 between December 2016 and July 2019. She sought another bribe of $105,000 but that wasn't paid, prosecutors said.
On one occasion in February 2019, Mapisa-Nqakula received more than $15,000 and a wig at a meeting at the country's main international airport, the papers say.
The person who allegedly paid the bribes was not named.
Prosecutors allowed her to hand herself in at a police station and be taken to court to be formally charged. They said they would not oppose her bail.
Mapisa-Nqakula has denied wrongdoing and had said she would cooperate with authorities after they searched her home in Johannesburg and seized evidence last week.
She has taken a leave of absence from her role as Parliament speaker. She was previously accused of taking bribes, but a parliamentary investigation was dropped in 2021. The case re-emerged after a whistleblower came forward last year, prosecutors said.
Her case is the latest graft scandal to hit the ruling African National Congress party, which faces a pivotal national election on May 29.
00:01
Ivory Coast: opposition party denounces arrest of six militants
01:14
Former Mali PM Choguel Maïga under investigation for alleged misuse of public funds
01:00
WATCH: Ukrainians protest for second day over anti-corruption law
01:10
South Africa: national assembly passes last part of annual budget bill
Go to video
Nigerian senator barred from parliament accuses Senate leadership of contempt of court
01:00
Kyiv sees rare wartime protest over anti-corruption legislation