The Citizen (KZN)

Ruling party’s integrity committee doesn’t exist – analyst

- Lunga Simelane Nondywana reporting by Thando

The ANC’s decision to keep members implicated in corruption charges shows the party’s integrity committee is nonexisten­t, according to a political expert.

Independen­t political analyst Goodenough Mashego said the committee was a facade the ANC formed to create an impression they were interactin­g with members implicated in corruption.

“I now don’t think that committee actually exists because existence means you must have some powers and there must be a thing that you are able to recommend and can be implemente­d.

“I think when there was so much complainin­g about the ANC doing nothing in dealing with its own people, they decided to set up something called the integrity committee so the public should believe there are internal mechanisms,” said Mashego.

“So, the ANC said, we are self-correcting in order for the public to believe there is a self-correction mechanism in place, called this integrity committee.”

ANC secretary-general Fikile Mbalula recently revealed that from the 20 people who appeared in the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture report, only six appeared on the 2024 candidate list, and each had been attended to.

This despite the Zondo commission report flagging almost 100 ANC members and leaders.

It is understood ANC NEC (national executive committee) member and former finance minister Malusi Gigaba and Deputy Minister of Water and Sanitation David Mahlobo did not appear before the integrity committee and had not been cleared at this point.

Mbalula said Gigaba and Mahlobo, who appeared on the list despite accusation­s against them, were allowed to stand as ANC candidates pending the outcome of their disciplina­ry committee.

He said there were no adverse findings on them because they did not appear before the integrity committee.

“So, they must account to the disciplina­ry committee. They are on the list as their cases have not been confirmed by the NEC and the NEC is due to process a host of cases which comes from the integrity commission that affect individual­s,” said Mashego.

The Citizen reached out to Gigaba and he refused to comment.

Mashego said it was obvious that even people like Gigaba and Mahlobo knew the integrity commission did not exist, hence they did not feel duty-bound to appear before it. “You cannot appear before something that doesn’t exist,” he said.

Zondo’s report recommende­d Gigaba be investigat­ed for corruption in relation to cash payments allegedly received during visits to the Gupta family in Saxonwold in the period 2010-2018.

Mahlobo, who was the state security minister at the time, was accused of receiving R21 million allegedly set to bribe judges. He denied the allegation­s. – Additional

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