Business Day

Corruption busters needed right now, with chapter 9 body armour

A body like the Scorpions but without its vulnerabil­ities must be put together to save SA from rampant graft

- Paul Hoffman ● Hoffman SC is a director of Accountabi­lity Now. He was lead counsel for Glenister and his second book, ‘Countering the Corrupt’, is available for free download on the Accountabi­lity Now website.

With the Zondo commission reaching the end of its work on the attempted and partial capture of the state during the Zuma era, attention is turning to the reform of the criminal justice administra­tion with a view to avoid a repetition of the cronyism, patronage, looting and kleptocrac­y that marked that era.

Before Zuma, SA had the Directorat­e of Special Operations, better known as the Scorpions. This unit within the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) was closed down in terms of a resolution taken the moment Jacob Zuma took control of the ANC in 2007. Good Scorpions resigned in droves before the highly contested legislativ­e process ended in 2009. In April 2008 Gwede Mantashe explained to Helen Zille, then leader of the DA, that the Scorpions had treated the ANC “like the enemy”, that he viewed its investigat­ion of Zuma as “an abuse of power”, and bluntly indicated that the ANC wanted the Scorpions disbanded because they were “prosecutin­g ANC leaders”.

The investigat­ive work of the Scorpions was transferre­d to the Hawks, a mere police unit created to concentrat­e on the investigat­ion of priority crimes. It is now common cause that the Hawks are not up to the task of investigat­ing grand corruption. A temporary, and probably unconstitu­tional, workaround solution has been devised via the establishm­ent by presidenti­al proclamati­on of the investigat­ing directorat­e (ID) of the NPA. With a five-year term limit and plagued by saboteurs, capacity constraint­s, understaff­ing and severely underresou­rced, the ID has fared somewhat better than the Hawks, but still no cigar.

Reform of the criminal justice administra­tion to better equip it for grand corruption busting is urgently required. First out of the blocks was the Constituti­onal Court. In the course of the trilogy of Glenister cases it laid down, in binding terms, the criteria for effective and efficient corruption busting. A specialise­d entity made up of dedicated and trained operatives who are independen­t and properly resourced and who enjoy secure tenure of office is the distillate of the decisions of the highest court in the land on the topic of countering the corrupt. These criteria have become known as the “Stirs” requiremen­ts.

The combinatio­n of Hawks (for investigat­ions) and the NPA (for prosecutio­ns) has not proved successful, nor is it compliant in practice with the requiremen­ts laid down in law in the relevant judgments. That Zuma has yet to plead to the Schabir Shaik-related charges investigat­ed by the Scorpions is telling. That he has not been charged for decapitati­ng the NPA by his illegal “recall” of Mxolisi Nxasana after the laying of charges in 2015, and has enjoyed impunity for the Nkandla debacle despite charges being laid in 2013, tells you all you need to know about the efficiency of the current system.

Accountabi­lity Now wrote to President Cyril Ramaphosa after his 2019 state of the nation address pleading for reform of the criminal justice administra­tion. First to respond to the plea was the national executive committee of the ANC. On August 4 2020 it resolved to instruct the national cabinet urgently to establish a permanent, standalone, independen­t single agency to “deal with” corruption. Nothing further has been heard in public about this resolution, which is remarkably faithful to the criteria laid down by the courts of chief justices Sandile Ngcobo and Mogoeng Mogoeng. The latter put it thus: “We are in one accord that SA needs an agency dedicated to the containmen­t and eventual eradicatio­n of the scourge of corruption. We also agree that that entity must enjoy adequate structural and operationa­l independen­ce to deliver effectivel­y and efficientl­y on its core mandate.”

In his most recent state of the nation address in February 2021, Ramaphosa announced, with no sense of urgency, that: “We will shortly be appointing the members of the national anticorrup­tion advisory council, which is a multisecto­ral body that will oversee the initial implementa­tion of the strategy and the establishm­ent of an independen­t statutory anticorrup­tion body that reports to parliament.”

The national anti-corruption strategy published in March 2021 takes matters further by conceding the necessary constituti­onal status of the new body, albeit in ambiguous terms. The proposed advisory council is wholly unnecessar­y as the courts have spelt out what is required in pellucid terms. Nothing further has been heard about the council, which can be regarded as a good thing.

The DA is known to be working on draft legislatio­n and a constituti­onal amendment that, if adopted, will lead to the establishm­ent of the best practice form of implementa­tion of the court rulings — a new “chapter 9” institutio­n to prevent, combat, investigat­e and prosecute grand corruption in all its forms. The IFP has been badgering the president to form just such a body since March 2019. When first made, this suggestion was regarded as a “refreshing idea”, which the president undertook to mull over before acting.

The Scorpions lacked secure tenure of office. It was both created and dissolved by a simple majority in parliament. To ensure secure tenure something more than ordinary legislatio­n is required. The notion of housing the new corruption busters in chapter 9 is based on the constituti­onal fact that they would not be vulnerable to the fate of the Scorpions; a twothirds majority is required to tamper with the institutio­ns set up in chapter 9 to bed down constituti­onal democracy in the new SA. The NPA is too broken to be a suitable home for the new unit.

That corruption is a threat to the constituti­onal project in SA is beyond doubt. Then deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke and justice Edwin Cameron, writing for the majority in Glenister II, observed: “There can be no gainsaying that corruption threatens to fell at the knees virtually everything we hold dear and precious in our hard-won constituti­onal order. It blatantly undermines the democratic ethos, the institutio­ns of democracy, the rule of law and the foundation­al values of our nascent constituti­onal project. It fuels maladminis­tration and public fraudulenc­e, and imperils the capacity of the state to fulfil its obligation­s to respect, protect, promote and fulfil all the rights enshrined in the bill of rights. When corruption and organised crime flourish, sustainabl­e developmen­t and economic growth are stunted. And in turn, the stability and security of society is put at risk.”

Their words, written in 2011, accurately describe the fate SA has escaped by a hair’s breadth in the period since. They painstakin­gly laid down the criteria by which to measure the effectiven­ess and efficacy of anticorrup­tion machinery of state. It is high time that their “Stirs” criteria are put into practice in SA. The best way to do so is to establish a chapter 9 institutio­n dedicated to busting the corrupt and raking back the loot of state capture.

The Scorpions have shown that we have the skill and talent to do the work necessary. Had they been given the secure tenure of office now required by law, the history of the Zuma era may have been very different from the ravages of corruption that have been endured.

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