Daily News

ANC ‘hung McBride out to dry’

- President BALDWIN NDABA

Despite the said leaders passing the ANC’s vetting process used to screen leaders who are fit to represent the party, Ramaphosa insisted the party had other plans to ensure it had proper representa­tives, even though he did not spell them out.

“As to us as an organisati­on, we obviously want to make sure that we continue to have people who are going to serve the interests of our people, and I say watch this space as we move forward on how that is going to be achieved,” he said.

This was Ramaphosa’s second visit to Johannesbu­rg this week.

In Ekurhuleni, the only metro under the ANC, the party was saved by a coalition deal after it failed to gain a clear majority.

“The ANC lost ground because of some of the missteps of the past. We are going out to our people to say we are renewing ourselves and people are embracing us,” he said. THE ANC has stuck to its guns that it no longer wants former Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid) head Robert McBride to return to the institutio­n.

The party used its majority in Parliament to adopt a report of the portfolio committee on police not to renew McBride’s contract, leaving the High Court the only option for the former Ipid boss. A total of 172 ANC MPs voted in support of the report against five from the DA.

However, the North Gauteng High Court is yet to hear the applicatio­n McBride lodged a few weeks ago.

Meanwhile, the Helen Suzman Foundation has filed another applicatio­n in the Constituti­onal Court on processes followed in the appointmen­t of the Ipid head. It does not want the minister of police to be involved in nominating the head of Ipid.

But in the tabling of the report in the National Assembly yesterday, parties were at each other’s throats on how the process was managed and dealt with.

Jerome Maake of the ANC defended the ruling party’s decision. He told the DA to stay away from ANC matters.

“We are dealing with a simple issue, which is complicate­d by people with hidden agendas. If it was a normal society, this would have been a normal labour relations issue,” said Maake.

“Both the minister of police and McBride are senior leaders of the ANC. The ANC has its own mechanism to deal with internal problems,” he said.

Maake said there was a breakdown of trust between Cele and McBride.

But the DA’s Dianne Kohler Barnard said the ANC had hung McBride out to dry.

She said the ANC had shamelessl­y attacked McBride during the hearings on the renewal of his contract and had assassinat­ed his character. “Our meetings were never about extending McBride’s contract, they were about discrediti­ng McBride,” she said.

Kohler Barnard said just six months ago, the standing committee on public accounts had commended McBride for his work in fighting corruption in the police, but now the ANC was turning against him.

Nazier Paulsen of the EFF said they had backed the report on the removal of McBride. However, their support was for different reasons.

He questioned the support McBride had received from the Helen Suzman Foundation and his involvemen­t with private investigat­or Paul O’Sullivan.

Nqaba Kwankwa of the UDM said this was the result of cadre deployment by the ANC.

He said it must be investigat­ed whether Ipid was properly located in the police, when it was the minister of police who nominated a candidate to investigat­e the same police. LAWYERS for two suspended NPA top prosecutor­s, Nomgcobo Jiba and Lawrence Mrwebi, have asked the Constituti­onal Court to reject the appeal bid by the General Council of the Bar (GCB) to bring new evidence not submitted in lower courts.

Jiba’s legal counsel, Norman Arendse, SC, made the submission­s in the ConCourt after the GCB’s complaint that Jiba was not an admitted member of the High Court before she occupied a senior position in the NPA.

The GCB’s legal counsel, Schalk Burger SC, argued that the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) had failed to consider that she was not admitted at the High Court when it made a ruling that she was fit to hold a senior position in the NPA. Burger said the fact the SCA failed to probe Jiba’s conduct was enough for the ConCourt to intervene and make a ruling on it as it raised a constituti­onal matter.

Arendse disagreed. “The GCB failed to raise the constituti­onal matter during the first hearing in the Pretoria High Court. They also failed to raise it during the appeal process in the SCA.

“We ask the (ConCourt) not to consider the applicatio­n. The GCB have changed their tactics.”

He said the SCA had made a ruling in favour of Jiba based on evidence placed before it and the GCB had failed to bring constituti­onal issues for the attention of the appeal. Judgment was reserved. |

I say watch this space as we move forward on how that (service) is going to be achieved. Cyril Ramaphosa

 ??  ?? Robert McBride
Robert McBride
 ??  ?? Dianne Kohler Barnard
Dianne Kohler Barnard

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