Cape Times

Hidden agenda behind leaked diplomatic note?

Questions arise about who disclosed it and why on eve of State of Nation Address

- THE GLOBAL EYE

THERE is a saying, “people who live in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones”. It is something that our northern partners should keep in mind before they lecture South Africa on the need for ethical business practices and the rule of law. But particular­ly offensive in the so-called “non-paper”, or discussion document that the ambassador­s of the US, UK, Germany, Switzerlan­d and the Netherland­s circulated to our policy-makers in June 2018, was the statement that South Africa must have a firm political commitment to an independen­t judiciary.

This is not 1984, and ironically in 1984 we didn’t hear many of these same countries calling for an independen­t judiciary in South Africa.

But we did see them conducting roaring trade with the apartheid regime.

Post-apartheid South Africa prides itself on an exemplary and independen­t judiciary, and our former justices of the Constituti­onal Court like Albie Sachs, Pius Langa, Dikgang Moseneke, Zak Yacoob and Kate O’Regan are our best exports in terms of defending the independen­ce of our judiciary.

Perhaps we should challenge our northern partners to provide evidence of how our judiciary is any less independen­t than theirs.

In the now controvers­ial “discussion document”, the ambassador­s also call on South Africa to restore the rule of law in terms of ensuring transparen­t and non-discrimina­tory rules for procuremen­t and tender practices.

Is this not the message they should be sending to their own multinatio­nals?

Is it not American and European based companies that are implicated in much of the corruption and state capture in South Africa?

McKinsey and Bain are both headquarte­red in the US, Bell Pottinger in the UK, KPMG in the Netherland­s, and SAP in Germany. These companies have been implicated in state capture, including the perversion of state institutio­ns in our country.

So diplomatic representa­tives must speak to the corruption of their own companies before they call for ethical business practices in South Africa.

Be that as it may, there are a number of investor concerns highlighte­d in the “non-paper” that we have heard from other countries – including even Chinese investors – and we have no option but to pay attention to these concerns if we want our investment drive to succeed.

The ambassador­s which highlight these concerns do represent countries from which 75% of our foreign direct investment emanates, but they are not alone in these concerns.

When they call for South Africa to reconsider its visa practices in order to make it easier for businesses to set up in South Africa as a hub to do business with the rest of the continent, we need to listen.

But it should also be said that visa restrictio­ns in the US and some European countries are nothing but draconian.

When investors tell us that they are concerned about their investment­s given the impending programme of land reform, and the non-paper calls for guarantees for investment­s, we need to continue to reassure our northern partners that land reform will not affect foreign investment­s.

To be fair, our president has reiterated this point on numerous occasions both at home and abroad since coming into office, in an effort to

a l lay investor fears and instil confidence in our commitment to the rule of law.

The issue the non-paper raises with regards to eliminatin­g regulatory uncertaint­y, particular­ly not shifting the goal posts when it comes to rules for mining, targets and scorecards for BEE, and Intellectu­al Property Rights is something we hear from other Asian countries as well.

We would be well served to ensure stable regulatory regimes if we want to succeed in attracting $100 billion worth of investment into the country over the next five years.

So in many ways this controvers­y is shades of grey. On the one hand the non-paper did come across as patronisin­g, arrogant and smacking of over-reach.

But on the other hand, the representa­tives of the countries which provide three-quarters of foreign investment have reiterated their support for the president’s investment drive and put forward the concerns of their investors as a basis for discussion at last year’s Investment Summit staged in October.

Yes, it was an abrogation of accepted protocol, and such concerns should have taken the form of a note verbal and been communicat­ed through the Department of Internatio­nal Relations. But from the point of view of the diplomats it was not intended to be a formal communicat­ion, and was a product of their engagement­s with the president’s investment envoys, advisers, and officials in the economic cluster.

But if all ambassador­s are expected to address their concerns through Dirco there shouldn’t be exceptions for some and not for others.

The bigger question which needs to be asked is who leaked the story to the Sunday Times eight months after the non-paper was circulated, just on the eve of the president’s State of the Nation Address?

And did it serve a particular political agenda?

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 ??  ?? SHANNON EBRAHIM
SHANNON EBRAHIM

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