Daily Dispatch

Gupta legal trajectory is one of prosecutio­n

- ex parte is associate professor in public law, and is a senior legal researcher in public law, both at UCT. This article is from The Conversati­on RICHARD CALLAND and MIKE LAW

IT ALL started with a wedding. A 200 plus entourage of friends and family landed their private aircraft at the Waterkloof Air Force base in April 2013.

What South Africans didn’t know was that the country had already entered a new era of corruption that was to have a myriad negative consequenc­es.

Now, after years of legal obfuscatio­n, political manipulati­on of ‘captured’ state institutio­ns and prosecutor­ial agencies, Cyril Ramaphosa’s victory to succeed Jacob Zuma as president of the ruling ANC has opened up the possibilit­y that an age of impunity will be replaced with a new era of public accountabi­lity.

Since the Gupta’s extravagan­t family wedding at Sun City a slew of revelation­s came out. These range from the state of capture report of former public protector Thuli Madonsela, to the damning Guptaleaks uncovered by investigat­ive journalist­s AmaBhungan­e.

All helped South Africans to come to understand the shocking extent of the systemic corruption inextricab­ly linked to the Gupta name. Despite all these revelation­s, the country’s prosecutor­ial bodies have remained silent.

So when the Asset Forfeiture Unit of the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) confirmed its intention to serve summons on members of the Gupta family and their cronies on January 15 this year ordering them to preserve assets to the tune of R1.6billion, the first question that sprung to mind was “why now”?

The answer lies with Ramaphosa’s election on a “change and reform” ticket. His victory in December has shifted the balance of power against the Zuma faction.

A second factor is that the ANC is concerned about its electoral future, with the 2019 national election on the horizon.

Zuma has cost the ANC almost 16% of its electoral majority – some three million votes. With opposition parties scrambling to form coalitions, and voting trends suggesting a further decline in the ANC’s share of the vote, there is now a very real prospect of the ANC being voted out of power in 2019.

An ANC majority is no longer a foregone conclusion – unthinkabl­e until recently.

It seems denial in the ANC has been replaced by a sense of fear. The party is trying to show the voting public that it can clear up the mess that it made.

Chickens are incoming

The NPA’s announceme­nt suggests the chickens seem finally to be on their way home to roost on the Gupta empire.

The NPA’s Asset Forfeiture Unit has applied to the high court for an order that the Gupta’s must “preserve” R1.6 billion worth of assets.

This power is granted under Section 38 of the Prevention of Organised Crime Act. The provision empowers the NPA to make an applicatio­n to the High Court to “prohibit any person … from dealing in any manner with any property”.

The court must grant the order if there are reasonable grounds to believe that property is the “instrument­ality of an offence” or “is the proceeds of unlawful activities”.

This must be read in light of the rest of the Act which allows the state to confiscate property that is the proceeds of unlawful activities. The rationale of the preservati­on order is, therefore, to prevent such a person or suspect from disposing of assets that are the proceeds of unlawful activities which would render a confiscati­on order fruitless.

An analysis of the act makes it clear that, if a preservati­on order is requested, the intention of the NPA must be to arrest and charge the Guptas and their associates.

A preservati­on order could only be made if a confiscati­on order is ultimately envisaged. In turn, a confiscati­on order can only be made after a criminal conviction.

The logical conclusion is that the NPA, assuming they are acting in good faith, are intent on arresting and prosecutin­g the Guptas. Ramaphosa and ANC’s dilemma

The problem for the ANC is this: if its intention is to make the Guptas the solescapeg­oats in the state-capture saga, they will be in a good deal of trouble.

Of the published Gupta scandals, the evidence strongly suggests they were not acting alone. The Guptas themselves may represent only the tip of the iceberg.

Top government officials are reported to have been involved in almost all instances.

For example, Mining Minister Mosebenzi Zwane, is heavily implicated in the Sun City wedding affair, while whistle-blowers Mcebisi Jonas and Vytjie Mentor implicate Zuma as a participan­t in the Guptas’ offering them (for undue reward) ministeria­l positions.

Zuma’s son, Duduzane, is also heavily implicated in corrupt activities related to the state power utility Eskom, as well as the finance minister debacle.

The NPA will struggle to prove its case against the Guptas, at least the full extent of it, without implicatin­g those that drove or condoned their misdemeano­urs.

It seems clear therefore, that the ANC cannot restore its reputation while letting its leaders who looted the country’s resources drift off into the wilderness.

This presents Ramaphosa with an acute political dilemma given that he’s pledged to rebuild unity in the ANC.

Hence, we are likely to see a very high level and multifacet­ed blame game.

But any attempt to restore its credibilit­y will probably prove counter productive unless the party accepts that some of its biggest fish must be prosecuted too.

And it goes without saying that private sector players such as Trillian and KPMG who were willing enablers of the abuse of state procuremen­t processes must also be held to account. If necessary they must pay the ultimate price of corporate collapse as Bell Pottinger did.

Just the beginning

The NPA’s announceme­nt represents no more than a good start after years of prosecutor­ial negligence and incompeten­ce – or dishonesty – and costly inaction.

In terms of accountabi­lity it’s indeed time to catch up and restore the legitimacy of important institutio­ns.

But the stakes are very high – for the implicated politician­s and their business cronies, for Ramaphosa and the ANC’s electoral future, and for the credibilit­y of South Africa as a trustworth­y destinatio­n for much needed investment.

Richard Calland

Mike Law

 ?? Picture: Martin Rhodes ?? EMPIRE: Ajay Gupta and his younger brother Atul, right, with Sahara director, Duduzane Zuma, far right
Picture: Martin Rhodes EMPIRE: Ajay Gupta and his younger brother Atul, right, with Sahara director, Duduzane Zuma, far right
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