Daily Dispatch

Judge rules against Hawks

- By AIDAN JONES

JUDGE Norman Davis of the Pretoria High Court ruled against the Hawks yesterday in an applicatio­n brought by the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa).

On May 29 2017‚ then Prasa Board chairman Popo Molefe launched an applicatio­n against the Hawks. He asked the court to declare that the Hawks had failed to conduct and finalise investigat­ions into alleged irregular tenders between Prasa and Siyangena and Swifambo. The tenders were concluded between 2009 and 2013 under former Prasa CEO Lucky Montana.

The Hawks opposed Molefe’s authority to bring the applicatio­n‚ describing it as “fatally defective”. In response‚ Prasa’s attorneys argued that the Prasa board had taken the decision to institute the applicatio­n.

Judge Davis ruled in favour of the Prasa board. He found that Molefe was “duly authorised” to bring the applicatio­n. It can therefore proceed. The Hawks have five days to provide a responding affidavit to the original applicatio­n.

The judge also ruled that civil society organisati­on Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) can join as a co-applicant. The Hawks had also opposed this.

In his judgment Davis said justice had been obstructed because “organs of state indulge in costly squabbles…rather than engage with the merits of the matter.”

The Hawks were ordered to pay both Prasa’s and Outa’s legal costs.

Davis said that “fruitless‚ wasteful and irregular expenditur­e of between R9billion and R14-billion are alleged” in these tenders.

Reacting to the judgment‚ Outa CEO Wayne Duvenage said: “We fought for this. It’s sad that civil society has to join the case for the Hawks to do their work.”

Outa joined the applicatio­n “in the public interest” and because it had the same view of the Hawks investigat­ion into corruption as Prasa.

Duvenhage said: “The Hawks were ruled against with costs‚ and we hope that they have a change of heart as a result of this and will actually do their jobs.”

Head of Legal Affairs at Outa‚ Stefanie Fick‚ said: “We need to get back to reality and start investigat­ing the corruption at Prasa.” — Groundup

Expenditur­e between R9bn and R14bn wasted

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