Business Day

ANC in last chance saloon

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The ANC leadership finds itself in the proverbial “last chance saloon” of this election season, in which corruption is centre stage.

Between the Phala Phala couch, Paul Mashatile’s house/lifestyle and the former speaker’s wigs, the evidence that the descriptio­n “the ANC is accused number one” is as accurate now as it was when first uttered by the president. He failed to renew the ANC apart from getting rid of its former president and secretary-general, both now haunting the ANC at the hustings.

The bill to introduce an investigat­ing directorat­e against corruption into the fumbling, stumbling National Prosecutin­g Authority is the best the cabinet can do to point towards institutio­nal renewal. But the new entity won’t cut it: lacking in independen­ce and being just as vulnerable to closure as the Scorpions were, there is ample scope for successful­ly impugning the constituti­onality of the bill.

It is now on the desk of the president awaiting his assent, a duty he must perform “diligently and without delay” unless he doubts the bill’s constituti­onality,, in which event he is obliged to send it back to the legislatur­e for reconsider­ation.

As long ago as August 2020 the ANC national executive committee (NEC) called on the cabinet to establish a stand-alone, independen­t, specialist body to counter corruption and organised crime. The bill does not do so, not by a country mile. The new Anti-Corruption Commission envisaged by the DA does fit the requiremen­ts laid down in binding fashion in the Glenister litigation and has wide support in opposition ranks.

Soon the president will either sip the Kool-Aid in the bill or turn away from it to do as his NEC and the DA demand: drink the elixir of constituti­onal compliance on countering corruption.

If he assents to the bill everyone, down to the humblest voter, will know the ANC-led government is soft on corruption, unwilling to implement binding court orders and in breach of internatio­nal obligation­s to establish independen­t anti-corruption machinery of state.

Kicking the can further down the road is no longer an option, not while the National AntiCorrup­tion Advisory Council is so taciturn and dilatory.

Paul Hoffman Accountabi­lity Now

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