A South African court has handed a five-year prison sentence to Julius Malema, marking a dramatic turn in the career of one of the country’s most polarising political figures and setting the stage for a high-stakes legal and political showdown.
The leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) was convicted over a 2018 incident in which he discharged what prosecutors said was a real rifle during a rally in Eastern Cape province.
Delivering the ruling in KuGompo City, Magistrate Twanet Olivier rejected Malema’s claim that the weapon was a toy and that the shots were merely celebratory, describing the act as deliberate rather than impulsive.
The court imposed five years for unlawful possession of a firearm, alongside additional penalties for ammunition possession and other offences.
While the sentences will run concurrently, the ruling carries potentially far-reaching consequences: if upheld after appeals, it could disqualify Malema from holding public office, dealing a significant blow to his party’s parliamentary presence.
Within minutes of the judgment, Malema’s legal team secured permission to appeal, ensuring that the outspoken politician will remain free while the case moves through higher courts.
Outside, hundreds of supporters dressed in the EFF’s signature red gathered in a show of solidarity, underscoring the deep political resonance of the case.
The EFF has framed the prosecution as an attempt to sideline its leader, whose confrontational rhetoric and populist platform have made him a dominant voice among younger South Africans disillusioned by persistent inequality decades after the end of apartheid.
The court, however, insisted the verdict was strictly a matter of individual criminal responsibility, not political affiliation.





























