The Citizen (Gauteng)

Moyane’s lawyer cries foul

VICTIM: SUSPENDED SARS COMMISSION­ER SUBJECT OF A ‘VENDETTA’

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

He claims there is a ‘vendetta’ against the suspended Sars boss.

Ramaphosa’s office insists parallel inquiries will go ahead as scheduled.

Suspended South African Revenue Services (Sars) commission­er Tom Moyane may be counting his returns before they have hatched, with President Cyril Ramaphosa yesterday downplayin­g claims by Moyane’s lawyer he made Ramaphosa “blink”.

Moyane yesterday lashed out at “populist blood-letting, personalit­y-driven vendettas and the abuse of power”, injustice, unfairness, verbal insults, wild and unfounded accusation­s and more.

The extraordin­ary “poor me” rant, penned and verbalised by his lawyer, Eric Dambuza, painted a picture of a man in a state of wretchedne­ss under attack for simply doing his job.

When pressed for comment, Moyane sat mute, effectivel­y muzzled by Dambuza.

“For his part, commission­er Moyane will continue to maintain his dignified silence and only communicat­e via his legal representa­tives, as currently advised,” Dambuza said.

Speaking on the letter to Ramaphosa, dated July 2, Dambuza said had the president not complied with their demands, they would “surely” have gone to court.

“To put it in colloquial terms, the president blinked,” said Dambuza. “He really blinked and so our demands were very, very direct and very reasonable.

“Probably he got good legal advice to say they should await the outcome of the Bham’s inquiry and we think it’s a very sensible way to deal with the matter. That’s why we commend the president for the stance that he’s taken.”

Moyane had complained about the “gross unfairness” of facing two proceeding­s simultaneo­usly, bias in the commission of inquiry and the scope of inquiry of both the Nugent commission of inquiry and Moyane’s disciplina­ry hearing, to be chaired by advocate Azhar Bham on July 21.

“We have always complained that you can’t have two processes. What has happened is that the president has realised that the two processes are in fact one,” Dambuza said.

“He has consolidat­ed the two processes himself. Remember, the president says he appreciate­s our concern that there are two processes going on. If the president had not appreciate­d that concern, he would have told us to go to court.”

That’s according to Dambuza’s analysis.

In reality, the relevant paragraph in the letter from the office of the state attorney reads: “We point out there are no public hearings scheduled in respect of the commission of inquiry until August 2018. Nor are there any hearings scheduled for your client’s disciplina­ry inquiry, save for that on July 21, 2018. There can therefore be no prejudice to your client if the outcome of the hearing before Advocate Bham SC is awaited in relation to this matter.”

Ramaphosa’s spokespers­on Khusela Diko said they were happy Moyane was happy. However, he didn’t quite understand Dambuza’s reasoning.

“The president has not made any decision on this matter nor has he halted any of the proceeding­s,” Diko said.

“The hearings will continue as scheduled. The president will await advocate Bham’s views before considerin­g submission made by Mr Moyane’s lawyers.”

Moyane’s disciplina­ry hearing covers the deteriorat­ion in public confidence in Sars, the handling of the Financial Intelligen­ce Centre report on Jonas Makwakwa, potential mismanagem­ent of refunds “which had brought Sars into serious disrepute and potentiall­y jeopardise­d the integrity of Sars as collector of revenue and adversely affected tax morality among tax payers”.

The Nugent inquiry deals with how Moyane’s restrictin­g of Sars almost collapsed the institutio­n. –

 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? MUTE. Suspended Sars commission­er Tom Moyane at yesterday’s press briefing in Illovo.
Picture: Neil McCartney MUTE. Suspended Sars commission­er Tom Moyane at yesterday’s press briefing in Illovo.

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