Mail & Guardian

Who SSA reports to should not depend on current

- Johann van der Westhuizen

Our intelligen­ce services failed us catastroph­ically. The embarrassm­ent of the utter incompeten­ce of taxpayer-funded informers, agents and spies before and during July’s shocking week of shame was rivalled only by the clumsy subsequent blame game of their political bosses.

In anticipati­on of the Constituti­onal Court’s judgment on former president Jacob Zuma’s refusal to comply with its order to appear before the Zondo commission, the consequenc­es of a possible prison sentence were the topic of speculatio­n for months. In April I argued that his refusal did not constitute a constituti­onal crisis, as some people contended. He is an ordinary citizen under the law. Intelligen­ce agencies simply had to do their homework to anticipate criminal conduct by his supporters. They did not.

When President Cyril Ramaphosa moved the department of state security into the presidency, under a minister who enjoyed his confidence, some analysts were elated. After all, this president is trying to get rid of the rot of the Zuma era. We trust him. Others saw the spectre of an imperial presidency, reminiscen­t of “Groot Krokodil” PW Botha’s State Security Council. And, according to a recent public opinion poll, Ramaphosa is no longer trusted that much anyhow.

How much power should the head of state have in a constituti­onal democracy? The considerab­le powers of our president might well have been influenced by the fact that the internatio­nally and nationally revered Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was in office when the constituti­on was drafted. To question critically the power about to be given to him was regarded as disrespect­ful, almost blasphemou­s. He would never abuse power for personal gain. His legal adviser, Nicholas Haysom, arrived at critical points when clauses dealing with the president were drafted. As to the future, Essop Pahad was mostly nearby on guard for deputy president Thabo Mbeki. Aside from apartheid propaganda, there was no reason to distrust Mbeki either.

However, the rules for soccer must not be designed for the striker or the goalkeeper, but for everyone. The drafters of the cricket rulebook should not know whether they are going to bowl or bat.

Philosophe­r John Rawls regarded a “veil of ignorance” as necessary for fairness. And, an important principle of organisati­onal design dictates that structures must be designed around functions, not people.

This is easier said than done. When the constituti­on was drafted everyone knew that Mandela was president

and the ANC likely to be the majority party for quite some time. Court cases about presidenti­al powers are not brought and decided as an abstract theoretica­l exercise. They mostly arise out of disputes or uncertaint­y,

during the time in office of a specific president. In the arguments presented by counsel, sometimes representi­ng political parties or interest groups, the incumbents and their adversarie­s are invisibly but

tangibly present. Four matters come to mind in which Constituti­onal Court judges had to remind themselves that not the current president, but all unknown future presidents, are under scrutiny.

Early in its existence the court had to decide on the constituti­onal validity of a proclamati­on of Mandela regarding medicines. In spite of his iconic image, the proclamati­on was declared invalid. Mandela contribute­d immeasurab­ly to our constituti­onal democracy by accepting the judgment.

When the court had to decide on Mbeki’s dismissal of spy boss Billy Masetlha, the emergence of Mbeki and Zuma factions in the governing party was already clear. A president must be able to trust their intelligen­ce chief.

But the court had to determine which standards applied to executive action and an employment relationsh­ip of this kind — the rules and procedures regarding unfair dismissal in labour law, civil service regulation­s, or rationalit­y — not for this situation, but for all later ones.

In 2011 Zuma decided to extend the term of office of Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo. An Act of parliament gave him the power to do so. However, the constituti­on stipulates the term of office of Constituti­onal Court judges “except where an Act of Parliament extends” it. Parliament passed its responsibi­lity on to the president. Thus the Act was obviously constituti­onally invalid.

However, it was not easy to consider the matter completely removed from the incumbent president and chief justice, a colleague after all.

Few if any people had a problem with how the chief justice performed his duties. The mere fact that the president explained his decision by stating how well Ngcobo had performed underlined the dangers of that power being vested in the president.

Should a future president be able to justify a decision not to extend the term by mentioning all the actions of the chief justice and the court that displeased the president or government? Surely not.

When Constituti­onal Court judges requested the Judicial Service Commission to investigat­e the conduct of Western Cape Judge President John Hlophe, he successful­ly sued them in the Johannesbu­rg high court. The Supreme Court of Appeal overturned the decision.

Hlophe tried to appeal to the Constituti­onal Court. Several of the judges who reported him were still members. Hlophe wanted the court to grant him leave to appeal; those judges to recuse themselves; and the president to appoint acting judges for his case. According to the constituti­on, an acting judge is appointed when a position is vacant or a judge is “absent”.

Much larger than the obvious immediate tensions involved, was the question whether any president should be able to appoint acting judges for a specific case. Imagine, for example, judges who wrote on freedom of expression recusing

themselves from litigation between the president and a cartoonist, so that acting judges can be appointed for that case.

Of course we must learn from instances of corruption or power abuse. However, neither trust nor distrust in any individual president should determine the power of the office. Concerned NGOS lobbied to vest the statutory power to make senior appointmen­ts in the National Prosecutin­g Authority in the national director of public prosecutio­ns, instead of the president.

Zuma’s perceived corrupt manipulati­on of the office loomed large and motivated the sentiment. But why should we trust a future powerhungr­y, empire-building official any more than a future president?

Whether national security should be located inside or outside the presidency must be considered based on functional­ity and constituti­onal values, not present role players. But, Zuma allegedly corrupted department­s and institutio­ns far outside the presidency … simply by appointing corrupt ministers and heads.

Sound structural design, a muchadmire­d constituti­on and strict laws cannot fully protect us. The preciously scarce commodity of integrity is essential.

Johann van der Westhuizen, who assisted in drafting South Africa’s constituti­on, is a retired justice of the Constituti­onal Court, the founding director of the University of Pretoria’s Centre for Human Rights and former inspecting judge at the Judicial Inspectora­te for Correction­al Services

 ?? Photo: Wessel Oosthuizen/gallo Images ?? ‘Groot Krokodil’: Former president PW Botha (centre) and his cabinet in the 1980s. His administra­tion was known for its draconian State Security Council.
Photo: Wessel Oosthuizen/gallo Images ‘Groot Krokodil’: Former president PW Botha (centre) and his cabinet in the 1980s. His administra­tion was known for its draconian State Security Council.
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 ?? Photo: GCIS ?? Absolute power? President Cyril Ramaphosa (centre) announced last month that the department of state security will be moved into the presidency.
Photo: GCIS Absolute power? President Cyril Ramaphosa (centre) announced last month that the department of state security will be moved into the presidency.

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