Business Day

SAP reparation­s are due

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The news that SAP has been zapped under the American Foreign Corrupt Practices Act for its Gupta-era bribery and corruption may shame the current leadership of the company into paying reparation­s to SA and the state-owned enterprise­s it pillaged.

The larger picture suggests there are many multinatio­nals in the same boat as SAP banks, accountant­s and lawyers who are co-responsibl­e for curating the state capture project, which has done and continues to do so much harm to the SA economy.

Obviously, state capture and corruption generally prejudice the prospects of the poor and marginalis­ed ever getting suitable education and dignified work.

The role of the criminal justice administra­tion in bringing SAP to book is commendabl­e, and will no doubt flourish once the nontrial resolution of corruption matters is properly formalised in SA.

Such resolution­s have been long discussed in the SA anticorrup­tion fraternity, and are likely to capture the attention of the National Anti-Corruption Advisory Council when it reports in February.

If the reparation­s recovered and to be recovered, as well as the fines paid by SAP already, are used to revitalise the state’s anticorrup­tion capacity, preferably by the establishm­ent of a new independen­t constituti­onally compliant entity that is fully equipped and capacitate­d to prevent, combat, investigat­e and prosecute serious corruption, we may yet emerge as a peaceful, prosperous society in which human dignity for all is respected and our guaranteed human rights are fulfilled through proper service delivery by the state.

Paul Hoffman, SC

Director, Accountabi­lity Now

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