Daily Nation Newspaper

STATE CAPTURE: ZUMA, AND THE SALE OF SA

- By MILTON NKOSI and NEIL ARUN

JOHANNESBU­RG – There were twists and turns at the corruption inquiry as former South African president Jacob Zuma said will give further testimony, withdrawin­g an earlier threat to pull out.

His lawyer, Muzi Sikhakhane, had said earlier yesterday that Zuma would “take no further part” in the proceeding­s.

The abrupt announceme­nt that Zuma was withdrawin­g from the inquiry came as no surprise. He contribute­d very little in his answers to questions about specific allegation­s of corruption. His responses from the witness box were repetitive: I cannot remember; I have no recollecti­on; I have no comment.

But the judge overseeing the inquiry later said Zuma had agreed to provide it with written statements.

The inquiry is investigat­ing allegation­s that the ex-leader oversaw a web of corruption while in office.

Hundreds of his supporters sang and chanted outside the venue while he was inside, but some say Zuma is uncomforta­ble in a legal setting such as this inquiry - in which he cannot dictate the terms as he has been able to do outside.

For now, he has withdrawn himself from the inquiry, but the judge has the option to summon him to appear - forcing him to show up. It is a route that, so far, the judge has seemed reluctant to take.

Zuma, was giving evidence this week at a commission set up to investigat­e corruption allegation­s during his time in office.

The inquiry takes its name from an academic term, “state capture,” that has become a buzzword - shorthand for the multiple scandals that plagued the Zuma administra­tion and eventually brought it down.

So what exactly is state capture?

State capture describes a form of corruption in which businesses and politician­s conspire to influence a country’s decision-making process to advance their own interests.

As most democracie­s have laws to make sure this does not happen, state capture also involves weakening those laws, and neutralisi­ng any agencies that enforce them.

State capture is not just about biasing public policy so that it systematic­ally favours some corporatio­ns over others,” Abby Innes, assistant professor of political economy at the London School of Economics, said in an interview.

“It’s also about strategica­lly weakening that part of the state’s law enforcemen­t mechanism that might crack down on corruption.”

“Classic corruption involves individual politician­s taking side-payments for preferenti­al treatment in outsourcin­g contracts, a small deal here, a licence payment there,” Dr Innes said.

“Full-on state capture is where corporatio­ns can influence the nature of the legislativ­e process, and political actors allow them to do so for private gain. The whole policy-making structure of the state becomes commodifie­d - something that politician­s are willing to sell.”

If traditiona­l corruption means slipping a bribe to every police officer that catches you speeding, state capture means paying to have your car fitted with police lights so that no officer dare stop you from speeding again. Rather than paying to get away with breaking the law, you pay to make the law work for you.

Where did the term come from?

The concept of state capture was defined in a 2003 World Bank report on corruption in eastern Europe and central Asia.

Joel Hellman, a report co-author who now serves as dean of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, said a new term was needed to describe the extraordin­ary tactics that certain firms, owned by oligarchs, were using to maintain their dominance of the market.

“We noticed that these firms were active players not just in lobbying, which goes on everywhere, but also in using private payments to public officials to shape the laws of institutio­ns in their favour,” Hellman said in the interview.

State capture theory initially helped explain the oligarchs’ hold over the fragile democracie­s of the former Soviet bloc. Today, the concept is applied more broadly for a range of dubious dealings between corporatio­ns and government­s around the world.

How did state capture operate in South Africa?

Many of the revelation­s from the inquiry concern the relationsh­ip between two families - the Zumas, centred on the former president, and the Guptas, three Indian-born brothers who moved to South Africa after the fall of apartheid.

The two families became so closely linked that a joint term was coined for them - the “Zuptas.”

All parties have denied the allegation­s against them, describing them as politicall­y motivated.

The Guptas owned a portfolio of companies that enjoyed lucrative contracts with South African government department­s and state-owned conglomera­tes.

They also employed several Zuma family members - including the president’s son, Duduzane - in senior positions.

According to testimony heard at the inquiry, the Guptas went to great lengths to influence their most important client, the South African state. Public officials responsibl­e for various state bodies say they were directly instructed by the Guptas to take decisions that would advance the brothers’ business interests.

It is alleged that compliance was rewarded with money and promotion, while disobedien­ce was punished with dismissal.

The public bodies that are said to have been “captured” in this fashion included the ministries of finance, natural resources and public enterprise, as well as the government agencies responsibl­e for tax collection and communicat­ions, the state broadcaste­r SABC, the national carrier, South African Airways, the state-owned rail-freight operator Transnet and the energy giant Eskom, one of the world’s largest utility companies.

The responsibi­lity for promoting and dismissing public officials lay with Zuma. According to David Lewis, executive director of Corruption Watch, a Johannesbu­rg-based NGO that investigat­ed the Guptas, the president’s powers of appointmen­t were key to the success of the alleged conspiracy. As well as ministers, the South African president has the right to appoint the boards of directors of state- owned enterprise­s and - critically - the heads of law enforcemen­t agencies.

Zuma could do as he pleased, Lewis said, “as long as he ensured who was appointed the head of the police, and the head of the anti-corruption agency of the police.”

The allegation­s eventually brought the Zuma presidency to a premature end last year and prompted the Guptas to leave South Africa.

They also damaged the reputation­s of various illustriou­s firms that had done business with the Guptas.

Ethical lapses were highlighte­d at the global accounting giant KPMG, management consultant­s McKinsey and Bain and Co, and the German IT company, SAP. Bell Pottinger, a London-based PR firm with a history of representi­ng repressive government­s, was dealt a fatal blow, closing down over its dealings with the Guptas.

State capture has blown a hole through the public finances, disappeari­ng tens of billions of dollars from Africa’s most advanced economy. The scandal has also dealt a huge blow to the reputation of the African National Congress, the party that has governed South Africa for nearly 30 years. Many of Zuma’s colleagues in the party have, like him, been accused of corruption.

According to Dr Innes, the ultimate victim of state capture tends to be the political system that is corrupted by business interests. “Politics becomes the point of entry and exit into what is fundamenta­lly a financial market for retaining control over the state and its assets,” she said.

The alleged conspiracy between the Zumas and the Guptas was eventually stopped by a combinatio­n of factors, including pressure from global financial markets that were alarmed by the hiring and firing of ministers in charge of the economy.

Lewis argues that while the country had been let down by certain democratic institutio­ns, such as its prosecutor­ial and regulatory agencies, it was rescued by others.

These included the independen­t media, the courts and civil society organisati­ons - all of which had honed their skills fighting apartheid. South Africans, he said, belonged to a “young democracy with a very recent tradition of resistance to authoritar­ian rule. They don’t take things lying down.”

Hellman, who testified at the inquiry, says South Africa’s open discussion of the impact of state capture had set a positive example for other countries.

However, he warned that there was also a risk that any such process ends up being used to settle political scores, rather than to address the “structural issues” that allowed the corruption to flourish.

Having left South Africa, the Guptas are now living in Dubai. -BBC

Zuma is currently on trial in

What was the impact of state capture in South Africa?

What can be learnt from the South African case?

The two families became so closely linked that a joint term was coined for them - the “Zuptas.”

 ??  ?? Judge can turn up the heat
Judge can turn up the heat
 ??  ?? Jacob Zuma says his hands are clean.
Jacob Zuma says his hands are clean.
 ??  ?? Duduzane Zuma (right), son of the former president, used to work for the Gupta brothers
Duduzane Zuma (right), son of the former president, used to work for the Gupta brothers

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zambia