Business Day

Thanks, Zuma, a wrecking job well done

- Marrian is political editor.

It is a year since SA heaved a collective sigh of relief when former president Jacob Zuma resigned. His departure came after nine years, but they were by no means wasted. Wasted implies squandered, years that had no purpose. Zuma had a purpose destructio­n and he achieved it quite spectacula­rly.

This week gave a sobering reminder of his “achievemen­ts”, from stage four load-shedding to startling admissions about a crippled criminal justice system, a rise in youth unemployme­nt and institutio­ns on the brink of collapse. The aftermath of the Zuma presidency will be felt for decades to come, despite his Twitter charm offensive and continued blind support from questionab­le characters.

While plans to break up Eskom are not new, under Zuma the sustainabi­lity of the power utility played second fiddle to its use as a vehicle for corruption and looting. President Cyril Ramaphosa expressed shock and anger when rolling blackouts hit this week. He told parliament on Thursday there is no single fix for Eskom, and public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan said he intends holding those responsibl­e for the deepening crisis accountabl­e.

Eskom is expected to be bailed out again in next week’s budget, even though its R400bn debt already places the government’s finances and the economy as a whole at risk. The load-shedding this week was attributed to substantia­l design and technical flaws at Eskom’s new mega power stations, Medupi and Kusile. Zuma celebrated the opening of Medupi amid much fanfare, but it has now emerged that the constructi­on and design of the plant were a mess.

Before the Mokgoro inquiry into deputy public prosecutio­ns directors Nomgcobo Jiba and Lawrence Mrwebi’s fitness to hold office, deputy prosecutio­ns head Willie Hofmeyr admitted that the National Prosecutin­g Authority had placed “undue importance” on the notorious spy tapes when it decided to drop corruption charges against Zuma a decade ago.

After a lengthy court battle by the DA, Zuma’s legal team admitted before the Supreme Court of Appeal that the decision to drop the charges was irrational and unlawful. “I accept that I made a mistake by attaching so much value to the integrity of the NPA and not sufficient weight to the evidence on the criminal case. I will live with that regret for a very long time,” Hofmeyr said.

Ironically, the integrity of the NPA is precisely what was destroyed under Zuma. Hofmeyr also admitted that a trend to prosecute those who were fighting corruption emerged under Jiba, Zuma’s key lieutenant at the NPA.

Zuma’s ascent to the highest office resulted in the disbanding of the Scorpions. In his state of the nation address Ramaphosa announced the setting up of a new investigat­ive directorat­e in the office of new NPA boss Shamila Batohi.

The erosion of capacity, deep factionali­sm, lack of credibilit­y and ineptitude at the NPA were starkly exposed during interviews for the post of NPA head. Ramaphosa’s promise of renewal and retributio­n will remain a dream if the NPA remains broken.

Another institutio­n counted among Zuma’s “achievemen­ts” is the SA Revenue Service (Sars), which continues to battle to shrug off the legacy of former commission­er Tom Moyane. His was one of the disastrous appointmen­ts made by Zuma, who interfered directly at Sars through meeting with dodgy consultant­s Bain & Company to “prepare” Moyane for the post. Bain and Moyane restructur­ed Sars in a way that benefited only tax dodgers, organised crime networks and the corrupt elite.

As far back as 2010 Zuma said he believed his then prodigy Julius Malema, who was facing a hefty tax bill, when he claimed Sars had been looking into the financial dealings of the president’s supporters since 2007.

Within a few years of these comments being made in an interview with the Sunday Independen­t, Sars had been purged of its leadership and its capacity had been decimated, bringing the organisati­on to its knees.

Retired judge Robert Nugent, who chaired the commission of inquiry into Sars, appeared before parliament this week and painted a bleak picture of the situation that still prevails inside the organisati­on. It remains hobbled by the leadership of officials appointed during Moyane’s tenure. To this day the executive committee running Sars is divided, inept and includes some dodgy officials who have yet to account for their role in neutralisi­ng Sars.

Nugent told parliament Sars needs a “clean sweep”, and this can only be done when a new commission­er is appointed.

There are many areas of SA’s political and social life that were deeply affected by the destructiv­e Zuma decade. A year after his departure, we should remember that we are far from being out of the woods.

THIS WEEK GAVE A REMINDER OF ZUMA’S ‘ACHIEVEMEN­TS’, FROM STAGE FOUR LOAD-SHEDDING TO ADMISSIONS ABOUT A CRIPPLED CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM, AND UNEMPLOYME­NT

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 ??  ?? NATASHA MARRIAN
NATASHA MARRIAN

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