Daily Maverick

Judge Zondo has sounded the alarm

It turns out that one cannot but drag the detritus of the old year into the new. This year started with leaping flames as we watched the National Assembly burn a mere day after the funeral service for Archbishop Desmond Tutu. What fresh horror was this, o

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While still recovering from a Parliament in flames and still mourning Archbishop Tutu’s passing, the Zondo Commission report Part One was released. It paints a depressing picture of how the state was captured by Jacob Zuma and his corrupt associates. Yet they continue their lives, undisturbe­d. The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) announced a special task team to deal with the findings of the Zondo Commission report. The NPA needs the Hawks to do its job too but it really is hard to fathom what the National Director of Public Prosecutio­ns, Shamila Batohi, and her team have been doing. The NPA is treading water and it is hard not to ask serious questions about Batohi herself and her ability to lead this complex institutio­n. Bringing one high-profile case to completion will go a long way towards restoring the credibilit­y of the beleaguere­d institutio­n.

So here we are in that strange but very South African position: we know what went wrong, have a pretty good idea of who did it, who bankrupted the state, and when and how. Some of those who stand accused are on television news daily parading as analysts. The perennial question is: “Now that we know what happened during the Zuma years, what will be done?”

If prosecutio­ns do not happen, then it is trite to say Zondo’s work would have been for naught. The failure of the NPA and the Hawks now present yet another existentia­l threat to our democracy. The Hawks was designed to be pliable. After all, our memories are not that short: there is a reason the Scorpions was disbanded. It happened in full view, with our Parliament’s acquiescen­ce and some pretty convoluted reasoning by then chair of the committee dealing with the issue, Yunus Carrim. A decent man, he twisted and turned to accommodat­e the wishes of the executive. There is a lesson in that too.

This institutio­nal dysfunctio­n within the Hawks and the NPA is why the insurrecti­on of July 2021 could happen with such ease, it is why Parliament can be razed, why our ConCourt building can be attacked and why our defence minister and the minister in the Presidency can be held hostage. It is because we live in a country of no consequenc­es, where we are told criminals are sick and deserve medical parole when they strut about on golf courses and where swimming pools are fire pools.

Those implicated in State Capture are taking full advantage of the NPA’s incapacity. It is for this reason that they are emboldened to spew their vitriol against Acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo in an attempt to discredit his report on television, on social media and elsewhere. Of course, the more they spew forth, the more they betray their guilt either directly or by associatio­n.

In the midst of all this mayhem (not perchance), attacks on the judiciary escalated. That opinion piece by Tourism Minister Lindiwe Sisulu does not deserve further analysis here, save to say that it is fact-free populist nonsense.

Justice Minister Ronald Lamola responded in a piece entitled “Dear Lindiwe…”

Members of the same Cabinet writing letters to each other in the media surely indicates that something is deeply wrong within that Cabinet.

Instead of calling Sisulu to order and firing her, President Cyril Ramaphosa has kept his usual monk-like silence, sending his close ally, Minister in the Presidency Mondli Gungubele, to do his bidding and condemn the utterances as “reckless” and to distance Cabinet from the utterances. Incidental­ly, Gungubele has also recently been assigned political responsibi­lity for the intelligen­ce services. There are, after all, all sorts of targets on the President’s back.

The President finally surfaced when, in his newsletter on Monday (which is always preternatu­rally optimistic, whether he is talking about insurrecti­on or structural inequality), he condemned attacks on the judiciary. That defence of the Constituti­on and the rule of law could only be called anaemic when Ramaphosa harbours a minister (only one?) who clearly does not believe in the Constituti­on or the rule of law. Then, on Thursday evening Ramaphosa issued a statement stating that he had met with Sisulu and (she) “conceded that her words were inappropri­ate. Minister Sisulu retracts this statement and affirms her support for the judiciary.” Yet, in a show of mind-boggling defiance, Sisulu issued her own statement saying “under no circumstan­ces” had she apologised or retracted. The Presidency in turn said it stood by its original statement.

At the time of writing the stalemate prevailed. The President has lost the proverbial locker room if a minister in his Cabinet is emboldened to issue such a contradict­ory statement. Sisulu’s position within cabinet is surely untenable? So tenuous is the President’s grip on power however that he allows the Presidency to be degraded and his own authority diminished by an open spat between himself and a minister. Who is in charge, we are left to ask?

Given the gravity of the situation, Zondo called an extraordin­ary media briefing, having consulted his ConCourt colleagues as well as the divisional heads of court. The usually amiable Zondo looked visibly aggrieved during his media briefing. Anyone who has seen the clip of Zondo during his interview before the Judicial Service Commission in April 2018 for the position of deputy chief justice could not help but be moved.

The measure of the man was also tested during the State Capture Commission he presided over and he was not found wanting. Yet, in Sisulu’s warped world, he is a “house n ***** ”. What despicable language and what poverty of thought to lean on such Americanis­ms. We cannot identify ourselves and instead default to such lazy references. Anyway, it turns out most of the piece was plagiarise­d.

Such plagiarism would be in line with Sisulu’s lack of principle and what is obviously a naked attempt to find favour with the Radical Economic Transforma­tion (RET) crowd within the ANC. The prize – the Presidency. It’s all predictabl­e, but very damaging.

Zondo was right when he said we need to draw a line as to what is and is not acceptable in a constituti­onal democracy. Zondo also seemed to be saying, if the President cannot or will not speak, the judiciary will. Speaking out would not have been a step Zondo took lightly. Judges, after all, are famously meant to operate “above the fray”. Some have said the acting chief justice ought simply to have released a media statement, as the Legal Practice Council and the General Council of the Bar have done. Ordinarily that would be the route taken. But to view these as ordinary times would be to miss the point and misunderst­and the political moment.

The ANC and its RET allies (in the EFF and elsewhere too) present a clear and present danger to our constituti­onal democracy. Words matter and the words of a Cabinet minister who took an oath of allegiance to the Constituti­on matter even more.

There are those within Ramaphosa’s Cabinet (and outside it) who would undo the Constituti­on in a minute in order to gain power and capture what is left of the state. These are not benign forces and we should not be so naive as to dismiss them as such. So when the edifice is under attack, it demands far more from those who lead the judiciary and from us all.

Zondo was very careful to draw the line between constructi­ve criticism, based on an understand­ing of the work of the ConCourt and its judgments, and attacks on the judiciary itself. The former is welcome, the latter ought to be condemned.

We would do well to reread the ConCourt judgment delivered in June 2021 and read on behalf of the majority of the court by Justice Khampepe. Her words are particular­ly apposite now: “This is not to say that the judiciary is a unique branch of state that must be sheltered from the public and all criticism… I am by no means implying that the judiciary is exempt from the accountabi­lity it owes to the society that it serves. However, critically, this does not mean that scurrilous, unfounded attacks on the judiciary and its members can be tolerated or met with impunity. It follows that the legal imperative to protect courts from slanderous public statements has little to do with protecting the feelings and reputation­s of judges, and everything to do with preserving their ability and power to perform their constituti­onal duties.”

Ramaphosa has been loathe to use the goodwill that sits outside the ANC to shore up his Presidency. He lives in vain hope of renewing this dysfunctio­nal organisati­on. As a result he is now wholly captive to the ANC’s corrupt politics. There are some who argue that Ramaphosa should leave Sisulu to dig her own grave instead of firing her. He needs a second term or the RET crowd will capture the ANC completely. This is the “realpoliti­k” argument and in many ways it is compelling.

However, how much more degradatio­n will there be this year as the ANC slugs it out ahead of its elective conference? Deferring our demands for action on the altar of internal ANC politics is thinking that serves to entrap citizens and deny our collective agency to change our society. We really should be forming alliances across all sectors of society for one purpose and one purpose only – to protect and defend this constituti­onal democracy. The power of the people still exists and if the first 28 years of democracy have taught us anything it is that abdicating power to politician­s alone cannot bring about a more just and equitable society.

What is happening in South Africa takes place against the global backdrop of democracy in decline. The world is at a turning point where it will need to choose between democracy and what Edward Luce in the Financial Times (referring to the American political milieu) called “an American version of fascism” when he wrote:

“The age of 1980s ‘neoliberal­ism’ is over. It is unclear what will replace it. One possibilit­y is an American version of fascism – something that really could happen here. It would be nativist and ruthless in its means of retaining power. Trump has given America a dress rehearsal. Biden’s declared rationale is to prevent that from happening.”

South Africans need to be alert to this, for we have seen strains of nativism and the ruthless desire to retain power in our own country. We need to ask what comes after the ANC’s inevitable loss of power. A kind of fascism or a new, distinctiv­e, inclusive politics that has at its heart the people and the Constituti­on?

Against this dangerous backdrop, Acting Chief Justice Zondo’s media briefing, as well as his first report, were brave, bold and unselfish. He has raised the alarm. We now need to ensure that the fire does not engulf the building.

We need to ask what

comes after the ANC’s inevitable loss of power. A kind of fascism or a new, distinctiv­e, inclusive politics that has at its heart the people and

the Constituti­on?

Turning and Turning: Exploring the Complexiti­es of South Africa’s Democracy.

 ?? ?? By Judith February
By Judith February

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