Business Day

Zuma s stalling state ’ capture strategy flows directly from ANC tactics

- John Steenhuise­n Steenhuise­n is an MP and interim party leader of the DA.

Former president Jacob Zuma s latest ’ attempt to frustrate the work of the Zondo commission on state capture and evade justice is not a strategy unique to him.

It is a pattern that has repeated itself in the ANC over the years, where an action or institutio­n that is lauded with much fanfare at its introducti­on is eventually turned on and dismissed as soon as it gets uncomforta­bly close to the criminal activities of high-ranking ANC members.

Zuma himself appointed the state capture commission two and a half years ago, and he is on record stating his willingnes­s to co-operate with it.

His latest claim that judge Raymond Zondo is somehow biased due to a personal history with him must be dismissed with contempt. Not only did Zuma appoint Zondo to chair the commission, he also recommende­d him for the position of deputy chief justice a year earlier. Reading Zuma s statement

at the time of announcing the Zondo commission in January 2018 puts into perspectiv­e the farce of his latest actions.

Back then he said the state capture allegation­s were of

paramount importance and deserving of finality and certainty ”.

He told us there should be

no area of corruption and culprit that should be spared the extent of this commission of inquiry ”. And he assured us that he had faith in all the

judges and their ability to execute their tasks with the requisite levels of fairness, impartiali­ty and independen­ce ”.

There was no talk of any personal history with Zondo, and there has certainly been plenty of time for Zuma to raise any possible conflict of interest issues since then. But he hasn t.

For him to now insist that Zondo recuse himself smacks of the desperatio­n of a guilty man cornered by the law.

The country needs to move on from the disaster that was the Zuma presidency, and he must stop wasting everyone s time.

But equally, the ANC cannot be let off the hook, because this practice of making an about-turn when things get uncomforta­ble is their own modus operandi.

We have so many ANC scandals that occur concurrent­ly these days that it s often difficult to remember

exactly who said what years ago. But it s important that

we do.

When our country signed the Rome Statute in 1998 and ratified it in 2000 to become a member nation of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), this was done with much fanfare by the ANC government. Then justice minister Dullah Omar said the establishm­ent of an [ICC] would not only strengthen the arsenal of measures to combat gross human rights violations but would ultimately contribute to the attainment of internatio­nal peace ”.

But the moment this ICC membership put the ANC on a collision course with a fellow Big Man politician, Sudan s

Omar al-Bashir, history was instantly erased and the ICC was rebranded a pariah institutio­n and colonial relic.

Similarly, the establishm­ent of the independen­t Directorat­e of Special Operations (DSO)

better known as the Scorpions in 1999 was

done with much bluster, including a promise that it would look into crime within police ranks.

But that was all quickly forgotten and erased when it became clear the Scorpions were truly independen­t and were prepared to go after criminals at the top of the ANC particular­ly the

— national police commission­er at the time, Jackie Selebi. Then the unit was quickly turned on, disbanded and replaced with a compliant and controllab­le unit.

Such is the volume of the daily ANC scandal deluge that its officials hope people will forget things that happened years ago and overlook their inconsiste­ncy and hypocrisy.

Just as the ANC did when it killed off the Scorpions and withdrew from the ICC, Zuma is now hoping to rewrite his relationsh­ip with Zondo as somehow compromise­d and problemati­c.

We cannot allow Zuma to do to the Zondo commission what he has been doing for two decades on the arms deal issue. When he says he wants his day in court, or he wants a chance to clear his name and set the record straight, he is not being honest.

He is using the oldest trick in the ANC playbook to delay, obfuscate and rewrite history in the hope that this will buy him time or even exonerate him.

It is time Zuma was treated as an ordinary citizen and a hostile witness, and not afforded the leniency these institutio­ns have shown him to date.

THERE SHOULD BE NO AREA OF CORRUPTION AND CULPRIT THAT SHOULD BE SPARED THE EXTENT OF THIS COMMISSION OF INQUIRY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa