Saturday Star

Parliament looks for funding for state capture investigat­ions

- MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA

PARLIAMENT has undertaken to ensure that the four committees probing allegation­s of state capture in state-owned enterprise­s have resources to meet their constituti­onal mandate.

This comes after concerns were raised that Parliament could be placing a strangleho­ld on the committees by not providing them with resources they need.

In June, chair man of committees Cedric Frolick ordered committees on home affairs, mineral resources, public enter prises and transport “urgently” to probe allegation­s of “state capture” emanating from the trove of the Gupta e-mails implicatin­g several ministers.

However, during the meeting of the public enterprise committee it emerged that the preferred evidence leader, advocate Ntuthuzelo Vanara, who was involved in the SABC ad hoc committee, will not be available to assist the committee with advice.

Vanara is no longer with the institutio­n’s legal services after he was placed in the office of registrar of members’ interests.

“Importantl­y, if Parliament cannot source the needed legal services from inside Parliament then it needs to take on an advocate from outside of Parliament to do the job,” DA chief whip John Steenhuise­n said.

He also said the committee would require the services of an advocate experience­d in litigation.

“The committee will also require assistance from experts in engineerin­g and the procuremen­t of large infrastruc­ture projects at a minimum.”

Steenhuise­n also said Parliament had a constituti­onal duty to investigat­e the damning state capture evidence which continued to be exposed through the leaked e-mails, alongside the public protector’s report into state capture.

“In order to properly fulfil that duty, parliament­ary committees need to be properly resourced to handle such in-depth investiga- tions,” he said.

Steenhuise­n complained that not a single ad hoc committee on state capture had been formed at his party’s request.

“Had this proceeded, then only one committee would have required such a high level of resourcing. Now at least four committees require this support if they are to stand any chance of getting to the bottom of the rot within the ANC led-government,” Steenhuise­n said.

Parliament’s spokesman Moloto Mothapo said there was no intention of limiting resources available to committees.

“Parliament has every intention of providing committees with the resources to carry out their constituti­onal mandate, which includes the inquiry into Eskom and other public enterprise­s,” Mothapo said.

He said that since Vanara was unavailabl­e to be evidence leader, Parliament would look for another official to execute the role from within their legal services.

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