The Citizen (Gauteng)

Security vetting a must – expert

RECOMMENDA­TION: ALWAYS A PRECONDITI­ON FOR JOB

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Killing of Uyinene Mrwetyana by a Post Office employee could have been avoided.

The government and state-owned enterprise­s should not tolerate an employed official or a potential worker who refuses to be vetted, because these people pose dangers to the institutio­ns’ security, an expert has said.

Professor Johan Burger, a policing and security consultant at the Institute for Security Studies, said vetting should be a strict preconditi­on for employment in the public office, particular­ly government department­s and SOEs.

He said disciplina­ry action must be taken against those who refused to cooperate with the vetting process by the State Security Agency (SSA) and job candidates should be excluded if this was clearly stated as a preconditi­on in the job advertisem­ent.

“If this is not a preconditi­on, they must make it one. The same should be the case with SOEs. When the vetting results from the SSA are known and become issues in department­s or the SOEs, they should act on it,” he said.

Burger said all individual­s, particular­ly in the public finance department, would have to be open to the vetting process.

“That must be part of the requiremen­ts otherwise there is no way that the employer will be able to know if the person has a criminal background or whether the person would be able to do the work with integrity.

“I would assume the same rule should be applied at SOEs because if you deal with state money or public finances, you should be vetted to determine whether you are suitable to do the work,” Burger said.

The expert opinion came as a parliament­ary committee report indicated that the brutal killing of University of Cape Town’s student Uyinene Mrwetyana could have been the result of SOEs that refused to vet their employees or take advice from the SSA about potentiall­y dangerous prospectiv­e employees.

A report by the standing committee on public accounts (Scopa) said despite being warned that one of its potential employees had a criminal record, the SA Post Office went ahead and hired the man. He later confessed to the rape and murder of Mrwetyana in the Clareinch post office. Burger further said in the case of Mrwetyana, someone should be held accountabl­e for being negligent by ignoring the SSA report on the potential danger posed by the employee.

State Security Minister Ayanda Dlodlo was told that the agency was facing a huge backlog of vetting state officials, with many refusing to be vetted.

That must be part of the requiremen­ts

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