The ombudsman said the USD 23 million spent on the renovations at Zuma's country homestead was excessive and ordered him to repay some of the costs.
But in his first public reaction to the damning report released 11 days ago, Zuma yesterday shifted the blame to government officials saying he did not ask for the renovations and he would not repay.
"They did this without telling me," he was shown saying in local vernacular on local private television ANN7. "So why should I pay for something I did not ask for."
The cost of the refurbishments, which include a helipad, a swimming pool and even a chicken coop, have ballooned to USD 23 million from the initial estimate of 65 million rand (USD6 million) in 2009.
It was the first time Zuma commented publicly on the so-called "Nkandla-gate" in reference to the name of the village in his stronghold in eastern KwaZulu-Natal province.
Already his ruling African National Congress, whose popularity is flagging ahead of May 7 elections, has said officials implicated in the scandal should be called to account.
The splurge on the house -- nestled in the verdant hills of Zuma's political stronghold -- has caused anger in a country where there is widespread poverty and where 10 million people live on welfare.
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