Mail & Guardian

ANC’S shifting take on rule of law

The initial commitment has been trundled underfoot by ministers and presidents

- Emsie Ferreira

As the year draws to an end, the justice department takes particular pride in being close “to bringing back the Scorpions”. The criticism of the bill meant to revive the defunct investigat­ing arm of the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) and the fact that it was disbanded in the first place tells of the political storms that have swept the portfolio for three decades.

In 1994, the work of the new ministry of justice and constituti­onal developmen­t was, as its name suggested, to realise the ideal of a democracy guided by a Constituti­on that recognises the injustices of the past and extends justiciabl­e rights to every individual.

It had to replace order, in one of its most perverse expression­s, with justice. For a while, all went well.

Then minister Dullah Omar had to set up the constituti­onal court and the chapter nine institutio­ns, as well as a new, independen­t prosecutio­ns service although it falls, to this day, within the ultimate political oversight of the ministry. Appreciati­on of the scale of the task has dimmed with time; it is now a vague memory that it took a year to negotiate the hierarchy of the courts.

In these formative years, there was an entente between the executive and the judiciary born from the Mandela administra­tion’s respect for the latter’s role in a country where, to quote Arthur Chaskalson at the inaugurati­on of the constituti­onal court, “for the first time the Constituti­on trumps parliament”.

With Mandela as the president, the court laid down precedent that affirmed the principle of legality as a limitation on public power and would, in time, launch a thousand rationalit­y reviews.

Omar also oversaw the establishm­ent of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which would become a model of transition­al justice loosely copied in other countries. The lack of consequenc­e for apartheid killers who failed to seek or obtain amnesty drew criticism that he became “the minister for dispensing with justice”.

It was unfair because the government as a collective lost the will to see the project to its conclusion, both as far as compensati­ng victims and prosecutin­g the perpetrato­rs.

But some, among them late Democratic Alliance MP Dene Smuts, thought the promise of restoring the normal operation of the law and the respect for the consequenc­es of breaking it, started wavering at this point.

Under Penuell Maduna, so did the executive’s early regard for the judiciary. He introduced bills that were ostensibly intended to transform the legal profession and the lower courts but read as an onslaught on the independen­ce of both.

The Legal Practice Bill put advocates and attorneys under a single council the minister could decide to dissolve. Chaskalson warned that this was inimical to the independen­ce of the profession.

The Magistrate’s Act and the

Magistrate’s Court Act drew warning letters from the United Nations special delegate for an independen­t judiciary, the chair of the Internatio­nal Bar Associatio­n and Justice Bernard Ngoepe, the judge president of what was still the Transvaal division in early 2001.

The Pretoria high court declared several sections of the two laws unconstitu­tional, saying the regime would have robbed the magistrate’s and regional courts of independen­ce from executive authority.

But it was the arms deal saga, and the faultlines it exposed in the ANC, that made Maduna leave the government in 2004.

He advised then president Thabo Mbeki not to issue a proclamati­on that would allow the Special Investigat­ing Unit, then under Judge Willem Heath, to look into high-level corruption in the deal. When Heath refused to hand over sensitive documents, Maduna threatened to close the unit.

In 2003, the minister stood next to Bulelani Ngcuka, the national director of public prosecutio­ns, when Ngcuka announced that Jacob Zuma would not be charged with corruption alongside Schabir Shaik, despite prima facie evidence against the deputy president. The charges stemmed from one of the first investigat­ions conducted by the Scorpions.

In 2008, the infamous Nicholson ruling would find in Maduna’s presence at that media briefing proof of a political plot to target Zuma. The appellate court later dismissed this as Judge Chris Nicholson’s “own conspiracy theory” but not before Mbeki had resigned.

DBy then there were less farflung allegation­s of presidenti­al meddling in prosecutor­ial decisions. They arose after Mbeki suspended Ngcuka’s successor, Vusi Pikoli, who had indicted Zuma in 2005, days after the president fired Zuma. Shaik’s conviction left him little choice.

But Justice Herbert Msimang struck the case against Zuma off the roll the following year, noting that it hinged on the outcome of challenges to the validity of search-and-seizure raids by the Scorpions. The charges were revived in 2007, but after Pikoli was suspended.

The official reason was the breakdown of trust between Pikoli and Maduna’s successor, Brigitte Mabandla. But Pikoli told the Ginwala inquiry that Mabandla had instructed him in writing not to arrest national police commission­er Jackie Selebi until she was satisfied this was in the public interest.

Again, it was the Scorpions who had investigat­ed Selebi — an ally of Mbeki’s in the power struggle between him and Zuma.

Ginwala cleared Pikoli of any wrongdoing. She also largely cleared

Mabandla, finding that she had been misled by director general Menzi Simelane. He made false allegation­s against Pikoli, and along the way the troubling assertion that the independen­ce of the NPA was not enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Mabandla’s tenure would never be more than the next episode in the state’s existentia­l battle around Zuma’s indictment, and the related tension over the future of prosecutio­ns-led investigat­ions.

The minister told the Khampepe commission the Scorpions should be subsumed into the police, saying it would ensure more “formidable” investigat­ive work, when the dismal end result would be the Directorat­e for Priority Crime Investigat­ions (Hawks). The commission disagreed and its findings were accepted, in qualified form, by Mbeki and the cabinet, but when Zuma wrestled the ANC presidency from him in Polokwane in 2007, the writing was on the wall.

The axe fell under Enver Surty, who served as a placeholde­r in the ministry while Kgalema Motlante did the same in the presidency. He downplayed fears that escalating attacks on the judiciary threatened its integrity and independen­ce.

It was not a credible denial, less so coming from a former lawyer. In January 2005, on the 93rd anniversar­y of the ANC, the party’s national executive complained that the “collective mindset” of the judiciary was not aligned to the aspiration­s of South Africans.

It said many judges “do not see themselves as being part of these masses, accountabl­e to them, and inspired by their hopes, dreams and value systems”.

Seventeen years later, Lindiwe Sisulu expounded on this sentiment in an obscene attack on the judiciary. That she felt free to call judges “house niggers” speaks of the contempt for the courts and the justice system that festered under the Zuma administra­tion.

It was never clear what qualified Jeff Radebe for the job of justice minister, other than his resolve to protect Zuma as the president dodged not only a return of the corruption charges but any consequenc­es for the Nkandla scandal.

Insiders say it was he rather than Zuma who worked tirelessly to prevent deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke from succeeding Sandile Ngcoko when he retired in 2011.

They also say Radebe did the bench a disservice that is felt to this day by making sure that transforma­tion mattered more than skill when the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) appointed judges.

In mid-2009, Radebe put JSC interviews on hold pending a review of whether racial and gender imperative­s had been sufficient­ly advanced in the 15 years prior.

He defended the indefensib­le when Zuma appointed Menzi Simelane as the head of the NPA, a step the constituti­onal court described as ignoring the “brightly flashing red lights warning of impending danger” of Ginwala’s findings.

And his successor, Michael Masutha, did the same when Zuma later repeated the travesty by appointing a supine Shaun Abrahams to the post.

The mess became Cyril Ramaphosa’s to clean up when the high court invalidate­d Abrahams’ appointmen­t and ordered that he, still deputy president, name a successor given Zuma’s patent conflict.

On Ramaphosa’s watch the NPA has been relatively stable — barring the exit of Hermione Cronje at the Investigat­ing Directorat­e — but not a success. Securing conviction­s for state capture cases seems beyond its ability. The president last year gave a cryptic undertakin­g to resolve concerns about the justice minister’s role vis-à-vis the prosecutin­g authority.

It was not clear whether he was undertakin­g to scrap the constituti­onal requiremen­t that the justice minister agree with prosecutor­ial policy and let the NPA account directly to parliament.

Nothing further has transpired in this regard, but Justice Minister

Ronald Lamola has appeared anxious, throughout his tenure, to stay at arm’s length from prosecutor­ial decisions.

Lamola has an equally laudable urge to comply with court orders and the law. Regrettabl­y his hands have often been tied by the ANC, be it on granting Janusz Walus parole, intervenin­g when Zuma was granted the same illegally or staying the right course on the extraditio­n of Michael Chang.

He has moved at uncharacte­ristic speed to table the founding legislatio­n for the new Investigat­ing Directorat­e Against Corruption, and it may yet be approved before next year’s elections.

It will then fall to the new entity to take further Chief Justice Raymond Zondo’s recommende­d state capture investigat­ions against senior politician­s.

Because the directorat­e will be located within the NPA it too will rely on a ministeria­l allocation of funds and critics say here lies the rub. The risk that it may face the same resistance the Scorpions did when they pursued politicall­y sensitive cases is written into the founding legislatio­n. Lamola should not take their concern as an affront. The law will remain long after he has left the portfolio.

Only Omar and he spare the ministry from ranking lower than a D.

 ?? ?? Brigitte Mabandla
2004 – 2008
Brigitte Mabandla 2004 – 2008
 ?? ?? Michael Masutha
2014 – 2019
Michael Masutha 2014 – 2019
 ?? ?? Ronald Lamola 2019 – present
Ronald Lamola 2019 – present
 ?? ?? Penuell Maduna 1999 – 2004
Penuell Maduna 1999 – 2004
 ?? ?? Dullah Omar 1994 – 1999
Dullah Omar 1994 – 1999
 ?? ?? Jeff Radebe 2009 – 2014
Jeff Radebe 2009 – 2014
 ?? ?? Enver Surty 2008 – 2009
Enver Surty 2008 – 2009

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