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| In February, South African police raided properties belonging to the Gupta family in Johannesburg as part of a graft probe (AFP Photo/WIKUS DE WET) |
Johannesburg
(AFP) - South Africa has launched proceedings to strip the permanent residency
status of one of the lynchpins of a controversial Indian business family
accused of corruption, an official said on Sunday.
Ajay Gupta,
a fugitive sought by police over alleged graft, now faces the prospect of
losing access to banking facilities as well as his South African identity
papers if his residency is rescinded.
Ajay is one
of three Indian-born Gupta brothers who are among South Africa's richest people
who are now being investigated by police over corruption allegations. The
country's graft watchdog has also accused them of having improper links to
former president Jacob Zuma.
Home
Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba has discussed the "the possibility of
revoking Ajay's residency" with President Cyril Ramaphosa, his spokesman
told AFP.
"Since
then, he has instructed the director-general of home affairs to investigate the
legal environment for that to happen," Mayihlome Tshwete told AFP.
Gigaba has
had a torrid week after insisting that Ajay's brother Atul was not a South
African citizen, only to be contradicted by the election commission which confirmed
he was a citizen who was listed on the electoral register.
Gigaba then
skipped a sitting of parliament on Wednesday at which he had been due to answer
MPs' questions, citing illness.
South
Africa has launched several investigations into the Guptas and Indian tax
officials this week raided several properties belonging to the brothers in
their former hometown as part of a money-laundering probe.
Last month,
South African authorities raided Gupta properties in Johannesburg as part of
the ongoing investigation into the alleged graft.
Ajay was
declared a "fugitive from justice" by police after failing to respond
to a summons.
Thirteen
other people are facing charges linked to allegations that the Guptas embezzled
millions of dollars of public money meant for poor South African dairy farmers.
They are
also accused of receiving highly-favourable government contracts during Zuma's
presidency.
Led by
Atul, the family arrived in South Africa in 1993 as white-minority apartheid
rule crumbled, a year before Nelson Mandela won the country's first democratic
elections.
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