Cape Argus

Gordhan’s own Waterloo

Minister left exposed after cross-examinatio­n at Zondo Commission

- PROFESSOR SIPHO SEEPE Seepe is the deputy vice-chancellor in Institutio­nal Support at the University of Zululand

“EVERY Napoleon has his Waterloo,” is a saying that reminds us even the greatest among us will have a moment of ignominiou­s downfall. The phrase owes its origin to the historical defeat of Emperor Napoleon at Waterloo, near Brussels.

“Waterloo is considered the culminatio­n of Napoleon’s overreachi­ng hubris.”

I could think of no better phrase to describe the scenes playing out at the Zondo Commission. It was a pitiful sight to watch Minister Pravin Gordhan, “the high priest of BantuBlack purging in SOEs”, squirm under cross-examinatio­n by advocate Dali Mpofu.

It didn’t take long to expose the ugly side of Gordhan. A man who has been riding the high horse of political morality was exposed to be nothing short of petty, jealous, racist and dangerous. For too long he has been allowed to level accusation­s against all.

He had become untouchabl­e. In his maniac obsession of finding everyone wanting but himself, he has been emboldened by the now known motley of journalist­s and analysts that had been eating out his hand. Until Monday, everything that Gordhan said about anyone would be headline news.

With so much investment in this project by news outlets, it came as no surprise some treated Monday’s performanc­e as a non-event – yet it was billed as the battle of the decade, a battle between a represente­d goodness (Gordhan) and forces of darkness (Tom Moyane).

By the end of the day, the tables had changed. The hunter had become the hunted, unable to cover his tail. Only frustrated and helpless anger remained. Takings from the encounter:

Take-home number 1. For all the huffing and puffing of Gordhan, he couldn’t answer a simple, basic question – does he have any evidence to back his accusation that Moyane, the erstwhile commission­er of Sars, had used his position to advance state capture? Under fierce cross-examinatio­n the arrogant minister conceded he had none.

Take-home number 2. After years of denying the existence of the rogue unit, Gordhan admitted its existence. More importantl­y, he acknowledg­ed it has no statutory foundation­s. This on its own suggests its establishm­ent was unlawful. If anything, Gordhan went rogue in his determinat­ion to pursue whatever he thought served his interests.

Advocate Mpofu was perhaps referring to this egomaniaca­l inclinatio­n when he accused minister Gordhan of suffering from a “god-complex”.

Take-home number 3. With his testimony, Gordhan succeeded in exposing that the whole Nugent Commission was a farce. The Nugent Commission ignored several reports pointing to the same issues that Gordhan admitted under cross-examinatio­n. This includes the reports by Sikhakhane and Kroon. The commission was arguably establishe­d to hear nothing, see nothing but to simply ensure it gets rid of Moyane. It is a matter of public record that the Nugent Commission reduced itself to a mere political tool to achieve certain pseudo judicial-political outcomes.

Take-home number 4. Gordhan’s contemptuo­us disregard for and descriptio­n of Des van Rooyen is nothing short of blatant racism. His defence that the comment had to do with integrity fell flat when it was pointed out to him that Mr Van Rooyen is more qualified in matters of finance than himself.

For the record, Van Rooyen holds two Master’s degrees whereas Gordhan, as he puts it, is a mere lowly pharmacist. It was pointed out that while he is busy pontificat­ing about credibilit­y he had no problem in the appointmen­t of his friend who demonstrab­ly did not possess the requisite qualificat­ions.

Take-home number 5. Gordhan has succeeded in exposing those journalist­s that fell under his spell. As they say he threw all of them under the bus. An anchor at a certain television station could not contain her frustratio­n when a field reporter pointed out Gordhan was exposed to be a gossipmong­er – all his assertions were based on gossip and hearsay.

Take-home number 6. This is probably the easiest; it is easy to simply accuse people in this country when you are a Gordhan. No evidence is required. Interestin­g when Gordhan is pressed for evidence he relies on some dubious statement that we should connect the dots. It was very clear that this time he couldn’t connect the dots.

Take-home number 7. This is not the first time that Gordhan embarrasse­d himself. Not long ago, he failed to answer a simple question from BBC journalist­s on whether he has a concrete evidence pointing to corruption by the former president Jacob Zuma. Instead of answering a simple straight question, he went on to mumble some incomprehe­nsible nonsense.

The fact that he keeps getting away with this behaviour of accusing people reflects the depth to which journalism has sunk in this country. You are guilty by virtue of mere accusation­s. Woe awaits those that dare to question those that have paraded themselves a paragons of virtue.

As Steven Friedman noted, the problem we have in this country is “that only one opinion is expressed and alternativ­e views are driven from the debate …So strong has the current groupthink become that it is those who challenge it who are taking risks”.

 ?? ITUMELENG ENGLISH African News Agency (ANA) ?? PUBLIC Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan testifies remotely at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into Allegation­s of State Capture. It didn’t take long to expose the ugly side of Gordhan, says the writer. |
ITUMELENG ENGLISH African News Agency (ANA) PUBLIC Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan testifies remotely at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry into Allegation­s of State Capture. It didn’t take long to expose the ugly side of Gordhan, says the writer. |
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