Cape Argus

Zuma tax return access battle continues

- LOYISO SIDIMBA

PUBLIC Protector advocate Busisiwe Mkhwebane will take on SA Revenue Service (Sars) commission­er Edward Kieswetter at the Constituti­onal Court next week in her battle for access to former president Jacob Zuma’s tax returns.

Mkhwebane’s move follows a 2018 complaint by then DA leader Mmusi Maimane after the book The President’s

Keepers, by investigat­ive journalist Jacques Pauw, was published.

The book detailed claims that Zuma had received R1 million a month from Royal Security, a company owned by ANC supporter Roy Moodley.

Mkhwebane has been trying to gain access to Zuma’s tax returns since Maimane lodged the complaint. In her papers filed at the apex court, Mkhwebane stated she strongly disagreed with the legal opinion of senior advocate Ngwako Maenetje suggesting that the public protector had no power to subpoena Sars for Zuma’s tax returns.

Mkhwebane then obtained a second opinion from another senior advocate Muzi Sikhakhane, who stated that the public protector could only be limited by the Constituti­on, which was superior to the Tax Administra­tion Act used by Kieswetter.

She said she could not send Sikhakhane’s opinion to Kieswetter due to her busy schedule.

In March, North Gauteng High Court Judge Peter Mabuse ordered Mkhwebane to pay 15% of the costs in the matter from her own pocket after she challenged Kiewetter’s decision not to allow her access top Zuma’s tax returns.

”If the appeal fails, we submit that the applicant (Mkhwebane) must pay the costs of the applicatio­n, on the party and party scale. Similarly, if the

appeal succeeds the first respondent (Kieswetter) must pay the costs. In other words, costs must follow the results and be costs in the appeal,” read Mkhwebane’s written submission­s prepared by senior advocate Dali Mpofu and Tholoana Motloenya.

Mkhwebane maintained that there is no room in this matter for either punitive costs against any party not to mention personal costs against any individual official.

”It is clearly in the public interest that the disputed legislatio­n be authoritat­ively interprete­d. Here the public official against whom a personal cost order was sought and granted was neither personally cited nor specifical­ly informed thereof,” stated her advocates’ submission­s.

Kieswetter said that Mkhwebane negligentl­y failed to provide Sars with the legal advice intended to counter its own legal opinion.

“Despite these principles already having been identified by Sars prior to the high court litigation, the Public Protector elected not to pursue the indicated legal recourse available to her.

“She litigated with reckless disregard for various procedural requiremen­ts, substantiv­e rights, and constituti­onal principles.

“She also wantonly accused the commission­er (Kieswetter) of violating the law and the Constituti­on, persisting in this stance even before this Court. She attacks SARS’ counsel for an attributed constituti­onal ‘nostalgia’,” read Sars’ submission­s.

Kieswetter said Mkhwebane had failed to remedy her conduct in litigation which was censured in the matter of the SA Reserve Bank Absa lifeboat.

The Constituti­onal Court will hear arguments in the matter next Thursday.

 ??  ?? Busisiwe Mkhwebane
Busisiwe Mkhwebane
 ??  ?? Edward Kieswetter
Edward Kieswetter

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