The Citizen (KZN)

Ipid and Saps must toe line

- Ilse de Lange

Police officers may not investigat­e cases about members of the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid) in which they have a personal interest, the High Court in Pretoria has ruled.

Judge Neil Tuchten yesterday granted an order, declaring that no member of the police may oversee or conduct or assist with an investigat­ion against a member of Ipid in which they have a personal, financial or any other interest which may preclude them from exercising their powers in an objective manner.

If an officer realised during the course of an investigat­ion that the matter involved their own financial or other interests, they must immediatel­y report it to the national police commission­er and withdraw from the investigat­ion.

The court order will remain in force until any statutory rules in the form of standing orders, regulation­s or national legislatio­n about the issue come into operation.

Undertakin­gs by the suspended Lieutenant-General Khomotso Phahlane and an investigat­ing team of the North West police not to involve themselves in investigat­ions against Ipid members were also confirmed as part of the court order.

Ipid initiated a probe against Phahlane in 2016 for alleged corruption and initiated two criminal cases against him. Shortly after it executed a search warrant at his home, a team of North West police members, in turn, began investigat­ing Ipid’s members.

Ipid maintained the police team had conflicts of interest because they were each the subject of an Ipid investigat­ion into alleged criminal conduct.

The judge said the relationsh­ip between Ipid and Saps was fraught. Accusation­s of serious criminal misconduct have been flung by both sides and deserved to be thoroughly investigat­ed, but no one was entitled to cry victory until the law had spoken. The hostility appeared to be so bad that he feared a measure of dysfunctio­n had intruded into the relationsh­ip between the two services.

He said the Saps had enormous powers and the potential for abuse was obvious, which was primarily why Ipid existed.

It was of special concern that Ipid members were at risk of “revenge investigat­ions” by members of the police service subject to or fearing an Ipid investigat­ion and such members should seldom, if ever, participat­e in such counter-investigat­ions, Tuchten said.

The Saps had enormous powers and the potential for abuse was obvious. Judge Neil Tuchten High Court in Pretoria

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