Sunday Tribune

It doesn’t appear the Guptas will ever face justice

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THE National Prosecutin­g Authority had all the time in the world to act against the Guptas but it didn’t and couldn’t. It was captured by Zuma and the Guptas and had its wings clipped.

Despite mounting evidence that the master crooks were looting state coffers in broad daylight and despite intense pressure from both the media and the public, the NPA dithered and procrastin­ated and dragged its feet, reluctant to act decisively against Zuma’s bosom buddies.

As soon as Zuma was forced out of office, the Hawks swooped down on the Gupta compound at Saxonwold but it was too late. The Guptas had flown away safely to Dubai and India.

It’s a repeat of the sagas of Sudanese President Omar al-bashir and former Zimbabwean first lady Grace Mugabe.

Why allow the thieves to flee and then enter into elaborate extraditio­n negotiatio­ns to bring them back?

In haste the Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU) seized all their luxury cars and a helicopter to the value of R180millio­n, but it was a drop in the ocean compared to the vast fortune they had amassed through crooked means and stashed in foreign bank accounts.

In any case, the NPA suffered a humiliatin­g set-back when the Gauteng High Court ordered the AFU to return the said assets to the Guptas as there was insufficie­nt evidence presented in court that the assets were obtained improperly or illegally. To our dismay, the Guptas had won round one.

In an attempt to ward off criticism and save his job, NPA boss Shaun Abrahams also ordered his men to raid the Estina Dairy Farm in the Free State, which was reportedly a front to siphon off state funds.

But again the courts came to the rescue of the thieves and ordered the NPA to return the stolen money to Atul Gupta and others due to lack of compelling evidence.

Undeterred, the NPA went for the Gupta-owned Optimum coal mine and other business ventures, but yet again the courts ruled the actions of the NPA were illegal. It sounds stupid but that’s the law. A thief can steal but to prosecute him successful­ly the state has to follow the due process of the law.

I have serious doubts the

Guptas will ever face justice. THYAGARAJ MARKANDAN

Silverglen

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