The Citizen (KZN)

GET A MOVE ON, SAYS THULI

MADONSELA: QUESTIONIN­G TIME TAKEN TO INVESTIGAT­E STATE CAPTURE Cold cases are hard, if not impossible, to crack, says former public protector.

- Yadhana Jadoo – yadhanaj@citizen.co.za

Former public protector Thuli Madonsela has slammed authoritie­s for their tardiness in investigat­ing allegation­s of state capture against many South Africans, including President Jacob Zuma, despite mountains of evidence. Cold cases are hard to crack, she argues.

Criminal investigat­ions into cases of state capture are being systematic­ally delayed with the result that the evidence trail could go cold and make eventual prosecutio­ns much more difficult, believes former public protector Thuli Madonsela.

“The Hawks and the NPA don’t need to be told how to do their job. If they wanted to, by now they would have long obtained cellphone records, bank records, travel itinerarie­s, computers and files from offices of implicated persons,” Madonsela exclusivel­y told The Citizen.

“There appears to be a reluctance to investigat­e, decisively. What I know for sure is that cellphone records are eventually discarded and triangulat­ion is impossible after a particular period. I wonder if the delay is deliberate­ly seeking to achieve that?

“Every day we lose without gathering relevant evidence makes a case a colder case. It’s hard, and most of the time impossible, to crack a cold case.”

Her comments come amid a volley of reports, e-mail leaks and testimonie­s implicatin­g government officials, state-owned entities, the duplicitou­s Gupta family and President Jacob Zuma in orchestrat­ing state capture.

Prior to these being made public, Madonsela, at the 11th hour in her end of term in office last year, released a startling report into the issue, aptly entitled State of Capture.

She has called for a judicial inquiry into state capture which President Jacob Zuma has delayed through a court challenge.

Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa, however, recently moved to indicate that prosecutio­ns need not wait for the inquiry to be completed.

Parliament’s own inquiry into state capture at Eskom has also heard shocking testimony from the state-owned entities’ former senior employees, who placed the Guptas, Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown and Zuma in direct collusion with each other.

State capture, which is said to have cost the country billions in public funds, has further pushed civil society organisati­ons to collaborat­e in tackling a valid issue which it says must eventually lead to Zuma’s sacking and all those involved being criminally charged.

Investigat­ive authoritie­s, however, have been dragging their feet in doing so.

“Corruption is a crime,” Madonsela said.

“The state capture investigat­ion is about grand corruption. Like all criminal matters, the matter is, two years down the line, becoming a cold case. I say two years because the material date is the removal of Nhlanhla Nene as minister of finance and his replacemen­t with Des van Rooyen,” she charged.

“The testimonie­s present a thread of evidence that strengthen­s the prima facie evidence that President Zuma has unconstitu­tionally, unlawfully and possibly corruptly shared his presidenti­al power with the Guptas and his son, who have leveraged and abused that power to instigate or influence the removal and appointmen­t of persons into strategic positions in state entities.

“While the implicated persons keep denying … the evidence against them is overwhelmi­ng. The witnesses speak about his presence in meetings or places where meetings took place with the Guptas, who were meddling in state affairs.

“What must now happen is implicated persons should be compelled by parliament to submit their bank statements and cellphone records correspond­ing with the material dates or periods, together with their travel itinerarie­s,” Madonsela said.

“The bank statements should also include those of wives and family foundation­s. They must also be compelled by parliament to agree to triangulat­ion of their cellphone locations.”

Every day we lose without gathering relevant evidence makes a case a colder case. It’s hard, and most of the time impossible, to crack a cold case. Thuli Madonsela Former public protector Corruption is a crime.

Read more about Madonsela’s hard-hitting comments on former Eskom CEO Brian Molefe in The Citizen on Monday.

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 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? THULI MADONSELA.
Picture: Gallo Images THULI MADONSELA.

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