The Mercury

Career officer required

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YEDITOR’S VIEW ESTERDAY, the portfolio committee on police met to discuss recommenda­tions that suspended Police Commission­er Riah Phiyega be fired.

Phiyega has no intention of going quietly. She has doggedly fought the findings of the Claassen Report into her fitness to hold office, which was instituted after Judge Ian Farlam’s commission of inquiry into the Marikana massacre.

Farlam’s report urged that the erstwhile national police commission­er have her fitness for office officially probed. Judge Neels Claassen duly did this and found that she should have foreseen that 34 miners would be killed when she gave the green light to the police on the ground.

This commission also found that she was an unsatisfac­tory witness and tried to avoid taking responsibi­lity for what happened and breached her duty by not managing the police openly and transparen­tly.

It’s a damning indictment, but it should be, because Marikana is an ineradicab­le stain on our national psyche.

The truth, though, is that Marikana notwithsta­nding, Phiyega’s performanc­e has been – to put it politely – underwhelm­ing at best. She’s been a danger to the morale and efficiency of the force, not least when she warned one of her provincial commission­ers of a high-level investigat­ion against him for purported criminal activity.

But then, she’s only one in a long line of seemingly bizarre political appointmen­ts to this critically important public service.

We’ve had Bheki Cele, who single-handedly re-militarise­d the police service into a police force and is best remembered for his injunction “shoot-to-kill” as well as his dubious lease agreements with his undeclared interests in them.

Before that we had Jackie Selebi, who befriended a drug lord despite all the evidence, and even leaked sensitive Interpol documents to him while head of the internatio­nal body, before being convicted and jailed for corruption.

It’s an unbelievab­le trifecta of incompeten­ce, corruption and unprofessi­onalism.

The time is long overdue for a profession­al career police officer, untainted by any whiff of scandal, to be appointed and given every help to create a police service that does what it’s supposed to: protect and serve the people of this country without fear or favour.

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