The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mudslingin­g only hitting brick wall

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With the divided ranks of the forces of law and order engaged in what appears to be a time- and resources-wasting internal war, we pose the question of whether this country’s policing has not lost its track.

Certainly, the bitter battles being fought by the head of the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid), Robert McBride, and acting police commission­er Khomotso Phahlane would tend to suggest a concentrat­ion on matters other than straight policing.

McBride, a former Umkhonto we Sizwe operative sentenced to death, but later reprieved while on death row, has proved himself a formidable force in the tangled warp and weft of the political tapestry. He survived gun-running charges while a high ranking official in the department of foreign affairs and drunk driving while head of the Ekurhuleni metro police, before being appointed to his present position.

He is lined up against Phahlane, who lifted the poisoned chalice as top man in the SA Police Service, as the former head of the Saps forensic service from 2012 to October 2015.

He is the latest in line following former commission­er and head of Interpol, Jackie Selebi, being jailed for corruption, Bheki Cele being suspended for corruption in 2011 and sacked in 2012, and Riah Phiyega’s October 2015 suspension by President Jacob Zuma following a recommenda­tion of the commission of inquiry into the 2012 Marikana massacre.

Now Phahlane and McBride have squared off before the parliament­ary portfolio committee on police over allegation­s the police were actively interferin­g with a probe into the commission­er’s perceived relationsh­ip with police service providers.

The issue remains unresolved, a he said, she said debate, but one that does policing little service.

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