Daily Dispatch

DA writes to Zuma calling for terms of reference for inquiry into state capture

- By LINDA ENSOR

THE Democratic Alliance (DA) has written to President Jacob Zuma to demand that he release the terms of reference for the judicial commission of inquiry into state capture.

It has been more than a week since Zuma announced the establishm­ent of the commission‚ as required by a Constituti­onal Court judgment.

Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng has appointed Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo to head the inquiry‚ which was ordered by former public protector Thuli Madonsela in her report on state capture.

“Clearly defining the terms of reference will be in the best interests of all South Africans and must be done urgently so that we can address ongoing state capture once and for all‚ and hold

“The country has a right to know what specifical­ly will be probed‚” DA federal executive chairman James Selfe said yesterday.

“The commission must get to work urgently and probe the serious allegation­s of state capture lodged against President Zuma‚ his son Duduzane‚ and the controvers­ial Gupta brothers.

“The ongoing discussion about the terms of reference for the inquiry and Zuma’s repeated attempts to have the report reviewed have been nothing but delaying tactics.

“The reality is that the terms of reference are already establishe­d by the report‚ which must now simply be implemente­d.”

In its letter to Zuma‚ the DA pointed those responsibl­e to account. out that any attempt to water down the scope of the commission would be unlawful and would undermine the powers of the public protector as set out in the constituti­on.

Selfe noted that the establishm­ent of the judicial commission was astounding­ly long overdue.

“If the president had respected the constituti­onal mandate of the public protector‚ the report on the findings of the judicial inquiry should have been finalised by June last year‚ a full seven months ago‚” Selfe said.

“The allegation­s of state capture have already undermined the public’s faith in the state. And‚ as the president himself noted‚ any further delays in establishi­ng the commission will make the public doubt government’s determinat­ion to dismantle all forms of corruption.” —

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