Sowetan

If I am criminally charged, I will step aside – Ramaphosa

President stands by decision to suspend public protector Mkhwebane

- By Franny Rabkin

Complaints to the public protector about Glencore and the so-called Farmgate scandal did not prevent President Cyril Ramaphosa from suspending Busisiwe Mkhwebane, the president said in court papers filed yesterday.

Ramaphosa was responding to Mkhwbane’s applicatio­n to the Western Cape High Court to urgently hear the second part of her applicatio­n challengin­g the president’s power to suspend her and to prevent parliament from continuing with an impeachmen­t process against her.

Her attempt to secure an urgent interim interdict failed on June 10. She has now asked the court to urgently set aside her suspension and the steps taken by parliament’s impeachmen­t committee so far.

In her latest bid, she added new reasons for having said the suspension was unlawful. These included that when she publicly announced she would be investigat­ing a complaint related to the allegation­s about the millions in cash stolen from the president’s Phala Phala farm, “I was met with an almost immediate retaliator­y response of an immediate, inexplicab­le and clearly irrational suspension”.

“The clear message and example sent to the other agencies… must clearly be one of intimidati­on and instilling fear. My suspension will most certainly have that probably desired effect.”

But Ramaphosa said in his answering court papers: “I am accountabl­e to the people of SA ... I state unreserved­ly that I have given my full co-operation to investigat­ions that are under way.”

He said he would not answer in this affidavit to the substance of allegation­s about “the so-styled Farmgate” because there were already allegation­s pending in which “I have given my full co-operation”.

These included the public protector’s investigat­ion, he said. He would be answering the questions Mkhwebane had sent to him about that by July 18, as per an agreement with acting public protector Kholeka Gcaleka, he said. “Advocate Mkhwebane places no facts before the court to demonstrat­e… that her suspension has impeded the investigat­ion in any manner whatsoever or that her suspension has in any way affected the investigat­ion negatively or resulted in the acting public protector being unable to fulfil her obligation­s in respect of the investigat­ion.”

He acknowledg­ed in his affidavit that the allegation­s in the criminal complaint laid by Arthur Fraser were “serious”.

“I have given a public undertakin­g that if I am criminally charged, I will step aside and temporaril­y vacate my office.”

Ramaphosa also addressed the complaint related to Glencore, saying he was not aware of any investigat­ion against him by the public protector in relation to Glencore.

He said a closer look at the letter from UDM leader Bantu Holomisa showed that it did not – as Mkhwebane claimed – ask her to “investigat­e whether or not the president was implicated in such corruption or breach of the Executive Members Ethics Act”.

Instead the letter had referred to reports of the revelation­s of corruption by Glencore in its guilty plea in the US under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and had said that “although SA was not specifical­ly cited ... the likelihood of these practices happening in SA is quite high”. It referred to Brian Molefe’s evidence at the state capture commission and suggested that the public protector “could take up the issue” to potentiall­y uncover “corruption of the same nature here”.

“This new complaint therefore does not constitute a pending investigat­ion.”

Ramaphosa said that before 2014, he had held an interest in Shanduka Resources, which was a “shareholde­r partner” with Glencore SA.

“Glencore SA has not, as far as I am aware, been accused of bribery and/or corruption, nor is [it] the subject of any criminal investigat­ions in SA, the US or any other country.

“Consequent­ly, there is no basis for the alleged conflict of interest in respect of the Glencore issue,” said Ramaphosa.

The hearing of the second part of Mkhwebane’s applicatio­n is expected to happen on July 25 and 26. The impeachmen­t process in parliament is scheduled to get under way on July 11.

 ?? /ESA ALEXANDER ?? Cyril Ramaphosa
/ESA ALEXANDER Cyril Ramaphosa

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