South
Africa's Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan delivers his 2016 budget
address to the parliament in Cape Town, February 24, 2016.
South Africa's Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said on Wednesday he did not know whether a wealthy family with close ties to President Jacob Zuma was under investigation on allegations of illegally moving money out of the country.
The
main opposition Democratic Alliance says it has written to the FIC
requesting that it probe the Guptas, a family of Indian-born businessmen
who have been criticised for wielding undue political influence over
Zuma.
On Wednesday, Gordhan rejected opposition charges of state obfuscation over the matter.
"The
director of the FIC (financial intelligence centre), as is the minister
of finance, is prohibited by the current legislation from indicating
and I don’t even know myself ... whether the FIC is investigating person
X or person Y," Gordhan said in response to a question in parliament on whether the Guptas were being investigated.
"Nobody
is obfuscating. Let me give you the assurance that we will do, and
entities that report to me to the extent that I can manage that, will do
what is required by the law without fear or favour," Gordhan said.
Several South African companies, including all four major banks, have cut links with companies associated with the Gupta family.
Zuma
has acknowledged the Guptas are his friends, but denies the
relationship is improper. The Guptas, whose wide range of business
interests include media and mining, have denied the allegations and say
they are pawns in a plot to oust Zuma.
Deputy
finance minister Mcebisi Jonas said in March the Guptas had influenced
the December firing of finance minister Nhlanhla Nene, a charge Zuma
also denied.
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