The Citizen (Gauteng)

Politics protects JZ from law

- Jameelah Omar This article was originally published in The Conversati­on. Read the original at www. theconvers­ation.com

Lecturer in criminal justice, department of public law at the University of Cape Town

South Africa’s National Prosecutin­g Authority has been embroiled in an almost decade-long battle over the prosecutio­n of President Jacob Zuma on 783 charges that include fraud, racketeeri­ng and corruption.

The charges are related to the controvers­ial post-apartheid arms deal.

Why has the prosecutin­g authority failed to prosecute? The reason is that the law has struggled to create the independen­ce necessary for prosecutor­s to pursue charges against prominent members of the executive. South Africa isn’t alone in this. The US has struggled too.

The real problem is that political pressure can get in the way of prosecutio­n. Members of the executive, including the president, can interfere with the head of the prosecutin­g authority, the National Director of Public Prosecutio­ns. Two examples stand out: the case brought against South Africa’s former police commission­er, Jackie Selebi, which eventually resulted in a trial and a prison sentence. The second is the Zuma arms deal case.

My suggestion is to establish a separate special prosecutin­g office that deals only with political cases – that is, those involving members of the executive and the legislatur­e. The usefulness of a special prosecutor was stress-tested in 1973 during the US president Richard Nixon debacle. The purpose is to create a greater measure of independen­ce, although the Nixon case also showed that it can be subject to political interferen­ce.

Watergate neverthele­ss illustrate­d why a separate prosecutin­g capacity targeting the executive arm of government is important.

But how would a special prosecutor be appointed in South Africa? There are various options.

It could, for example, be left to the chief justice or parliament to decide when a matter demands the appointmen­t of a special prosecutor.

A system like this wouldn’t completely remove the potential for interferen­ce, but it would ensure it was minimised. It would also free the director from being embroiled in political battles, enabling them to concentrat­e on their core job, which should be to increase the overall effectiven­ess of the prosecutin­g authority, as well as public confidence in its abilities.

Room for political interferen­ce

In South Africa, the efficacy of the entire criminal justice system rests on the ability of the prosecutin­g authority to do its job properly. This is because it enjoys a monopoly over the prosecutio­n of crime. The constituti­on mandates it to be the gatekeeper – it alone decides which criminal cases go to trial.

Every year the prosecutin­g authority receives hundreds of thousands of cases prepared by the South African Police Service. The bulk of them are ordinary offences such as murder, robbery and assault committed by ordinary people against other ordinary people. Very few involve prominent state officials.

The prosecutin­g authority does receive cases against members of the executive. But the number of political cases are a drop in the ocean compared to ordinary cases. They neverthele­ss risk derailing the proper and effective functionin­g of the prosecutin­g authority.

In reality, the prosecutin­g authority is only quasi-independen­t. This is for two reasons.

The first is that the language describing the independen­ce of the prosecutin­g authority in the constituti­on isn’t very clear.

In terms of the constituti­on, the minister of justice and constituti­onal developmen­t has final responsibi­lity over the prosecutin­g authority. Case law has held that the minister can’t instruct the prosecutin­g authority to prosecute or not, but is entitled to be kept informed about cases that the public might be interested in or that involve important aspects of legal authority.

Despite this innocuous clarificat­ion, ministeria­l oversight leaves open a gap for interferen­ce.

The other major flaw in South Africa’s system is that there’s room for political interferen­ce in the way in which the director is appointed. The director is appointed by the president. The president can make the decision without any consultati­on.

The director is the embodiment of the institutio­nal independen­ce of the prosecutin­g authority and the incumbent is meant to play an executive role rather than a political one. The director is responsibl­e for determinin­g prosecutio­n directives and prosecutio­n policy. He or she may intervene in decisions to prosecute and may review decisions to prosecute – or not to prosecute – after consulting with provincial directors of public prosecutio­ns.

But given that the president appoints the director, the prosecutin­g authority is in a difficult position. To perform its functions effectivel­y, it must assert an independen­ce it doesn’t enjoy.

Interferen­ce with director

The office of the director has been the subject of controvers­y over the past 18 years, with the appointmen­t and subsequent removal of four directors. Some of this controvers­y has centred on whether the prosecutin­g authority would, or wouldn’t, prosecute certain political cases. Vusi Pikoli was removed by then president Thabo Mbeki for prosecutin­g Jackie Selebi.

The fact that these types of cases are within the purview of the director provides grounds for political interferen­ce over the office. This interferes with its overall performanc­e.

So far, the debate about increasing the independen­ce of the director has centred on how the appointmen­t is made and how an incumbent can be removed. One suggestion has been that a properly constitute­d committee made up of different stakeholde­rs does the interviews and shortlists candidates. On the removal of an incumbent, there’s been a suggestion that the president’s right to suspend a director without consultati­on is removed.

Bolstering the appointmen­t and removal procedures are important and should be done. But it’s not enough to focus on the individual director. South Africa needs to remove the incentive for political interferen­ce over the director. That’s the only way the efficacy of the prosecutin­g authority can be enhanced.

The prosecutin­g authority is in a difficult position. To perform its functions effectivel­y, it must assert an independen­ce it doesn’t enjoy. The other major flaw in South Africa’s system is that there’s room for political interferen­ce in the way in which the director is appointed.

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