The Citizen (Gauteng)

Theft smacks of Watergate

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It is common cause among rational South Africans that the judiciary is regarded as among this country’s most respected institutio­ns; the bulwark between the excesses of a pressured society and the spring tide of anarchy, which laps at the edges of our constituti­onality. It is nothing short of a travesty of any holding to the rule of law that the offices of Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng should be burgled. Quite apart from the crass criminalit­y of the deed, is the seemingly total disregard by the perpetrato­rs for any semblance of respect for either the courts, whose records were rifled, or for the dignity of the chief justice.

Mogoeng’s spokespers­on, Nathi Mncube, disclosed that 15 computers in the human resources unit – which contained important informatio­n about judges in this country, officials in the office of the chief justice, the Constituti­onal Court, high courts, Supreme Court of Appeal and other specialist­s courts – were stolen.

Mncube confirmed that the floor in the building in Midrand had looked to be closely targeted during the break-in. “There are computers upstairs but nothing was taken there.”

There are disturbing similariti­es with the Watergate scandal, when five burglars were arrested for breaking and entering the Democratic national committee headquarte­rs at the Watergate complex in Washington on Saturday, June 17, 1972.

The FBI investigat­ed and discovered a host of interlinke­d dirty tricks emanating from the official organisati­on to re-elect president Richard Nixon, ultimately leading to Nixon’s stepping down in 1974, the only American president to resign from office.

It is evident that the close targeting of informatio­n in Mogoeng’s office would also point to the same frightenin­gly intimate insider knowledge used to hijack R200 million in the OR Tambo cash heist.

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