The Citizen (KZN)

Cele slated for misusing ‘state resources’ after flying in

- Lunga Simelane

Police Minister Bheki Cele’s arrival at the ANC’s election manifesto in a South African Police Service (Saps) helicopter was an act outside his constituti­onal mandate, according to experts.

A video showcasing this sparked criticism with South Africans accusing him of abusing state resources.

Brigadier Athlenda Mathe said the Saps chopper had been deployed to the ANC manifesto launch to monitor the large crowd, and was not for Cele’s personal use.

“The Natjoints [national joint operationa­l and intelligen­ce structure] as the operationa­l arm of the JCPS [justice, crime prevention and security] cluster are responsibl­e for the safety and security of all major events in the country, according to the Sasrea [Safety at Sports and Recreation­al Events] Act,” she said.

“Various law enforcemen­t agencies led by the Saps pull resources together to ensure all events are incident- and crimefree.

“It is against this background that the co-chair of the Natjoints, who is also the deputy national commission­er responsibl­e for visible policing and operations in the Saps, will ensure adequate deployment of police resources to ensure heightened patrols in the form of foot, vehicle and air support.”

However, crime activist Ian Cameron said the police were blatantly and deliberate­ly misleading the public in the excuses it made for Cele’s stunt, which fit within his policy mandate.

“He is not involved in any form of operation. He shouldn’t be involved in guiding operations of the police – that does not fit into his mandate,” he said.

“The brigadier said the Natjoints were responsibl­e for safety and security and he was fulfilling his mandate. She’s deliberate­ly misleading.”

Cameron said the Saps could not improve or change if there was constant interferen­ce on an operationa­l level by the minister.

“We need to start questionin­g the point of a national commission, or commission of any sort, because why do we have commission­ers and a national commission if the minister believes he’s an operationa­l member?

“His main focus should be to represent the civilian police secretaria­t and to influence, guide and develop policy and strategy for the police as a portfolio.”

Head of justice and violence prevention at the Institute for Security Studies, Gareth Newham, said the Saps would only become effective when it was highly profession­alised and insulated from any political interferen­ce or influence.

“As soon as people not trained as police officers start getting involved in operationa­l decision-making, directing resources without fully understand­ing the impact or what the risks might be, you generally have a problem.”

The Democratic Alliance (DA) called for Cele to be billed in his personal capacity.

DA shadow minister of police Andrew Whitfield said Cele’s helicopter stunt was a gross abuse of state resources, and he should be made to pay for every flight minute.

The party also called for a full internal investigat­ion to review the process that authorised the use of the helicopter by Cele.

“All the Saps officers across the chain of command who signed off on this irregular use of a police asset should be subjected to a disciplina­ry process,” he said. “State resources, including Saps assets, should never be used for party political events.

“By commandeer­ing a helicopter from the Saps Airwing Unit, Cele displayed an arrogant sense of entitlemen­t that has become the hallmark of ANC politician­s.”

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