Mail & Guardian

State capture probe is a JZ delay tactic

Zuma kicks another political football into touch, as the Hawks, NPA and public protector look on

- Serjeant at the Bar

President Jacob Zuma and the ANC have suddenly become keen on the appointmen­t of a judicial commission of inquiry into allegation­s of state capture. Initially, there appeared to be furious resistance to the recommenda­tions of then public protector Thuli Madonsela to this effect. A deluge of further allegation­s has clearly forced the hand of the ruling party, save for the legitimate objection that it is a presidenti­al prerogativ­e to appoint a judge to head the commission.

Of course, the ANC’s concession comes with a qualificat­ion: a commission must investigat­e all forms of possible state capture since 1994. The scope of this proposed inquiry going back more than 20 years will take years to complete. Recall how long the Marikana inquiry took under the leadership of a most experience­d judge who was asked to examine a finite set of events.

The act of appointing a commission is an act of decommissi­oning, in that, once appointed, the commission will suspend the debate about state capture for a few years, at best. It is a classic case of Zuma kicking for touch, thereby ensuring that the political ball will be out of play for sufficient time to ensure the appointmen­t of a suitable presidenti­al successor.

The state capture allegation­s obviously call for urgent criminal investigat­ion followed by the possibilit­y of criminal trials. Consider the evidence already in the public domain.

The public protector produced a report in the last days of her term of office, presumably fearing that her successor would not be willing to continue the probe, which would have justified more serious remedial action than the appointmen­t of a commission of inquiry.

Subsequent­ly, former Cabinet minister Ngoako Ramatlhodi claimed that, as a result of his refusal to kowtow to Eskom’s pressure to favour the coal deal with the Guptas’ Optimum company, he was fired as minister of mineral resources in favour of Mosebenzi Zwane. Shortly thereafter the South African Council of Churches released a report documentin­g activity involving Cabinet ministers, officials of state-owned enterprise­s and the Gupta family, suggesting wide-scale “looting of state resources”.

A group of researcher­s working through the Public Affairs Research Institute then joined the dots in a report entitled Betrayal of the Promise, which painted a picture of a sophistica­ted takeover of the state by the Guptas and the president and his cohorts. The ink was barely dry on this report when the City Press and the Sunday Times published a string of emails that corroborat­ed these earlier allegation­s — and then the nation learnt that there were more than 100000 emails, which would be released gradually, doubtless showing further nefarious activity.

In the kind of democracy that was envisaged when the Constituti­on was approved, institutio­ns created therein and pursuant to further legislatio­n would have already performed their legal duties. To be absolutely clear: an anti-corruption unit worthy of the name would have demanded all this evidence, including the published emails, and instituted a full-scale investigat­ion with a view to bringing charges without fear or favour.

If these emails are shown to be authentic, and to date there is no denial that they are, the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) has more than enough evidence to bring charges against a host of people on grounds, inter alia, of bribery and corruption.

If the NPA showed 10% of the enthusiasm it exhibited when it sought to charge then finance minister Pravin Gordhan on a charge sheet based on a manifest disregard for basic legal principles, we would at the very least have been reading lengthy charge sheets against those who consistent­ly appear in this mountain of allegation­s, most of which have been in the public domain for more than a year.

And what about the former public protector? Could it seriously be argued that, if Madonsela were still in office, her office would not have conducted a further investigat­ion into sustained allegation­s that go to the heart of the governance of South Africa?

There has been no reaction from any of these institutio­ns, which are so central to the preservati­on and promotion of the core constituti­onal values of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. In itself this serves to confirm the allegation that these institutio­ns no longer perform as intended and have themselves been captured. The consequenc­es are dire: given that there are many thousands of emails yet to be disclosed, the governance of the country will stagger from crisis to crisis as the institutio­ns tasked with solving the problem say, in effect: “Frankly, we don’t give a damn!”

To return to the president’s new enthusiasm for a commission of inquiry, South Africa should say no, thank you. We do not want to wait three more years before we find out whether the country was put up for sale. There are at least three institutio­ns paid for by the taxpayer to ensure that corruption and bribery are investigat­ed and, if necessary, properly prosecuted, and relevant additional remedial action taken.

The call should be to the NPA, the Hawks and the public protector to do their mandated jobs expeditiou­sly. That is the way a democracy deals with this level of allegation in matters that go to the heart of government.

 ??  ?? No go: A commission of enquiry into state capture will take years to complete, while tax-funded governance institutio­ns such as the NPA, headed by Shaun Abrahams (above), show no will to act. Photo: Oupa Nkosi
No go: A commission of enquiry into state capture will take years to complete, while tax-funded governance institutio­ns such as the NPA, headed by Shaun Abrahams (above), show no will to act. Photo: Oupa Nkosi

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