The Citizen (Gauteng)

Prasa board may take minister to court

- Nkululeko Ncana

Transport Minister Joe Maswangany­i is being accused of sabotage and could face criminal charges for allegedly stonewalli­ng the possible prosecutio­n of individual­s involved in a corrupt R2.6 billion locomotive tender.

The Citizen has it on good authority that Maswangany­i stands accused of breaching his oath of office for failing to appoint additional members to the Passenger Rail Agency of SA (Prasa) board, which is now asking the court to force the Hawks and the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) to investigat­e and prosecute those found to have acted criminally.

According to insiders, Maswangany­i’s failure to appoint additional board members, even on an interim basis, “means the board cannot take decisions as they don’t have a quorum”.

Prasa thus approached the court asking it to compel the Hawks and the NPA to investigat­e and prosecute those who acted criminally in relation to the Swifambo Rail locomotive contract.

The Prasa board has been at loggerhead­s with the law enforcemen­t agencies which have yet to make arrests related to alleged corruption at the rail agency.

Early this month, Judge Ellem Francis of the High Court in Johannesbu­rg ruled in favour of the Prasa board’s request for the Swifambo contract to be declared corrupt and be set aside.

Insiders told The Citizen that earlier this month, the Hawks and the NPA – through the state attorney – wrote to the Prasa board informing it they would not submit a responding affidavit to the court regarding the applicatio­n asboard chairperso­n Popo Molefe did not have the authority to bring such an applicatio­n.

It is understood that the board – whose term ends next Monday – is now weighing up its options and may bring criminal charges against the minister for allegedly failing to “act on blatant criminalit­y that is known to him”.

Maswangany­i is accused of colluding with the state attorney to undermine the Prasa board’s court applicatio­n.

“The board is complainin­g that the minister has completely ignored it.

“They are saying they have simply requested him to exercise his constituti­onal obligation in the national interest because it is taxpayers’ money that has been stolen,” said an insider who asked not be named.

The board is blaming Maswangany­i for failing to appoint additional members which, Molefe said, amounted to the minister having “ensured that the board does not form a quorum and thus cannot take important decisions”.

Molefe maintained that Maswangany­i has continuous­ly refused to meet with his board.

“The minister is deliberate­ly violating the law in order to make Prasa dysfunctio­nal.

“He has continuous­ly made his board unable to account to him and parliament and he needs to explain why,” said Molefe.

The Citizen understand­s that the board has officially accused Maswangany­i of acting unlawfully, leaving the door open for criminal proceeding­s against him for “deliberate­ly and knowingly” stifling the possible prosecutio­n of those involved in the alleged Swifambo tender corruption.

Molefe would not say whether he had officially communicat­ed with Maswangany­i, but said that the minister and his predecesso­r, Dipuo Peters, should be held responsibl­e for the dysfunctio­nal state of Prasa.

Maswangany­i’s spokeperso­n, Ishmael Mnisi, referred The Citizen to previous statements on Prasa.

“We have many times given the views of the minister regarding the Prasa board matter,” he said.

It is taxpayers’ money that has been stolen

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