Times of Eswatini

Cyril: Zondo report deeply disturbing

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Two weeks after receiving the first of three parts of the State capture inquiry report, President Cyril Ramaphosa said it ‘paints a deeply disturbing picture of how democracy was compromise­d with criminal intent’.

Lid

The report lifted the lid on how several public institutio­ns were infiltrate­d, looted and damaged, including SAA, the SA Revenue Service (SARS) and the Government Communicat­ion and Informatio­n System (GCIS). It also dealt with the Gupta-owned The New Age newspaper.

Writing in his Monday weekly newsletter, Ramaphosa said though the findings were disturbing, they would assist the country in rebuilding.

“This part of the report paints a deeply disturbing picture of how key institutio­ns of our democracy were compromise­d and undermined with criminal intent. Not only were significan­t amounts of money stolen, but these institutio­ns were not able to properly fulfil the functions for which they were establishe­d.”

Implicated

Several high-profile politician­s, businesspe­ople and individual­s are implicated in alleged corruption and looting of taxpayers’ money.

“The findings and recommenda­tions of the Zondo Commission will help the country to rebuild these institutio­ns and to hold those responsibl­e to account. We must ensure we use them to safeguard these institutio­ns into the future so they may never be captured again,” Ramaphosa said.

Findings

Among startling findings, the report found former President Jacob Zuma and then SARS boss Tom Moyane played a ‘critical role’ in dismantlin­g the tax authority, and former GCIS boss Mzwanele Manyi was an ‘enabler’ of State capture when he dished out millions of Rand worth of advertisin­g to the The New Age (TNA) newspaper. It also stated that government could not be trusted with the ‘ultimate responsibi­lity’ to lead the fight against corruption.

Ramaphosa said all these findings and more should be used as a benchmark to defend the constituti­onal order.

“The things we have read in the report should strengthen our resolve to defend the institutio­ns of our democracy, all the entities of our State and our democratic constituti­onal order.

“We must safeguard against efforts to diminish our hard-won democracy, whether these take the form of corruption in State-owned enterprise­s, the subversion of our law enforcemen­t agencies, the sabotage of economic infrastruc­ture, or attacks on the independen­ce and integrity of our judiciary,” he said.

The commission, chaired by acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo, is expected to hand over the remaining two batches of the report before the end of February.

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