The Citizen (KZN)

Outa compiles dirt on JZ

DOCUMENT DETAILING PRESIDENT’S ALLEGED MISDEMEANO­URS It will be delivered to National Assembly speaker and MPs before vote of no confidence.

- Eric Naki – ericn@citizen.co.za citizen.co.za

The Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) believed it would be able to do what the ANC and the National Assembly failed to – remove President Jacob Zuma from power, based on his conduct and the state capture in which he is implicated.

The civil society organisati­on said it has built a case against Zuma to enable members of parliament – particular­ly those in the ANC – to vote according to their conscience­s in the upcoming motion of no confidence.

The body presented the dossier to the National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete yesterday and intend giving all MPs a copy of the dossier through formal engagement with parliament.

It would also present the document to relevant institutio­ns, including the ANC national executive committee, the Hawks, the minister of police, the National Prosecutin­g Authority and the public protector.

“Removing President Zuma from power is the primary step that needs to be taken before South Africa can start the journey of redressing the devastatin­g effect that his conduct and the situation of state capture has had in our country,” said Outa COO Ben Theron.

“We believe others implicated in the report should also be removed from office and prosecuted; we are handing this document to law enforcemen­t for this purpose.”

Theron, who managed the entire project, said Outa’s dossier showed that Zuma had allowed himself to be influenced in his Cabinet appointmen­ts, appointed poorly qualified and incompeten­t individual­s in decision-making positions and allowed corrupt individual­s to benefit from state coffers or failed to institute action when he became aware of such conduct.

It said Zuma had also mismanaged his Cabinet in a manner that had a detrimenta­l effect on the country and the economy, used or manipulate­d state resources to avoid prosecutio­n for at least 783 charges, willfully and maliciousl­y lied or misled parliament and the nation and abused his position to enrich himself, his family, his friends and his cronies. Among the reports that Outa used to build its case were the South African Council of Churches’ “Unburdenin­g Panel” and one produced by a team of academics known as “Betrayal of the Promise – How South Africa is being Captured”.

The process was also assisted by the Gutpa e-mail leaks that came to light at the end of May.

“The documents from the Gupta leaks have no doubt provided significan­t support and strength to the claims presented in our case document,” Theron said.

He said the building of the case document had taken several months, with a team of experience­d investigat­ors, researcher­s and legal counsel.

According to Theron, the case document was prepared and compiled in a manner that makes it suitable for presentati­on in a court of law. The aim was to ensure that Outa was able to take the matter to the Constituti­onal Court when it was convinced that it would be meaningful to do so.

He said the envisaged commission of inquiry into state capture to which Zuma agreed should not preclude all other attempts to remove the president from power.

“While we welcome the undertakin­g from the president to signal the formation of a judicial commission of inquiry into state capture, we trust this decision will not be used as a reason to stave off decisions or actions available in the quest to remove him. Commission­s of inquiry can take years to unfold, but South Africa is burning and we do not have the luxury of wasting more time,” said Theron.

Removing Zuma from power is the primary step

For more informatio­n Read the full document on

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