Daily Maverick

Why a TRC on corruption just wouldn’t work

- Sibusiso Ngalwa Sibusiso Ngalwa is Politics Editor at Newzroom Afrika and Sanef chair

In recent days former public protector Thuli Madonsela has mooted the idea of a TRC on corruption of sorts. She made the bold statement at a leadership summit in Port Elizabeth over a week ago, where she suggested an amnesty for the corrupt.

Madonsela told those attending the virtual Nelson Mandela Bay Leadership Summit 2020 that such a move would offer the country an opportunit­y to start afresh.

“We might want to consider ... amnesty. I know people don’t like it when I say that. It’s the second time I [am saying] we might need a truth and reconcilia­tion kind of thing around corruption.

“It’s just so systemic that if people can self-disclose without huge consequenc­es, it will allow us to clean the system,” The Herald quoted Madonsela as saying.

Clearly the irony was lost on Madonsela that she was addressing an event held in Nelson Mandela Bay – a citadel of corruption and gross financial mismanagem­ent. The city is currently run by a loose coalition and with no clear direction. It is a city characteri­sed by poor service delivery, where open sewage spills on to the streets at regular intervals.

It is a city hollowed out by rampant corruption and financial mismanagem­ent. A city where the Auditor-General had to withdraw its audit team following threats to their lives.

It is a city where the ANC-led council unlawfully appointed Mvuleni Mapu as acting city manager despite him having faced unresolved allegation­s of corruption. Not only was he suspended in 2015 following allegation­s of manipulati­ng supply chain processes, but preliminar­y findings showed that through his actions, the municipali­ty had incurred irregular and wasteful expenditur­e running into millions.

Following a three-year suspension, Mapu was reinstated without a disciplina­ry process having taken place and duly rewarded with the highest administra­tive post in the Metro.

This begs the question: Is this perhaps the kind of amnesty Madonsela was referring to?

Is it an amnesty where those with greasy palms are simply allowed to sanitise their filthy hands and start afresh?

It isn’t rocket science why the Nelson Mandela Bay political leadership would entrust a compromise­d person such as Mapu with such a crucial position. The only possible reason is that he was appointed to the position so that he can be a useful spanner in the corruption toolbox of Nelson Mandela Bay politician­s.

Fortunatel­y the Hawks did the Lord’s work when Mapu was arrested in August for corruption relating to a R900,000 bribe he allegedly received in his previous role while heading the Metro’s housing department.

Last month Corruption Watch released its 2020 edition of the Analysis of Corruption Trends (ACT) report, which painted an unsavoury picture about the extent of corruption in the country.

The report showed that, for the second consecutiv­e year, police corruption topped the list of complaints received.

This relates to bribes demanded by the police from members of the public, particular­ly motorists. This kind of corruption was more prevalent during the lockdown period.

This is another classic case of corrupt police officials literally cashing in on the crisis brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic. They may be small fry – considerin­g that some of those bribes involved a few hundred rands – but they are no different from the sharks who earned millions through corrupt activities in PPE procuremen­t.

The point is that all corruption is wrong – no matter how small or grand.

The motives of an officer who accepts R100 to allow an unlicensed driver to proceed without being arrested are no different from those of a Mapu who allegedly accepted R900,000.

But one wonders whether Madonsela had the corrupt traffic official in mind when she broached the idea of a corruption amnesty.

The reality is that such an amnesty would only serve to protect the political elite who are facing serious allegation­s of corruption, if the evidence before the Zondo Commission is anything to go by.

The call for a corruption amnesty is not new.

Some within the ANC have suggested it as a solution to the governing party’s looming breakdown as a result of law-enforcemen­t investigat­ions into corruption by senior politician­s.

Not only is it untenable, it is undesirabl­e. Pardoning the corrupt would only serve to entrench the sense of invincibil­ity and impunity that they possess.

How else can one explain the R1-billion in public funds that just sommer disappeare­d, as happened in the Free State? Not a single house was built (R600-million), not a single asbestos roof removed (R230-million) and not a single cow was milked in the Vrede Dairy Farm scandal (R200-million). No thug would do that if they did not believe there would be no repercussi­ons for their actions.

That is exactly why the call for a corruption amnesty should be rejected outright. We need to restore the respect for the rule of law.

No matter how well meaning Madonsela may have been, she is way off the mark on this one.

Accountabi­lity and respect for the rule of law is what you should be advocating, Professor Madonsela.

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