Sowetan

Use taxman to nail looters – Motlanthe

Motlanthe says justice too slow

- By Zingisa Mvumvu

The best way to nail public officials who have looted public funds and aided state capture with impunity is to use the tax system.

This is the view of former president Kgalema Motlanthe, who was addressing the media in Parktown yesterday in his capacity as chairman of the ANC’s OR Tambo School of Leadership.

Motlanthe was asked what must happen to his comrades who stand accused of looting public funds and aiding state capture, which collapsed several institutio­ns of democracy during the tenure of former president Jacob Zuma.

The former deputy president of the ANC said it was perhaps time the country used a different method to pin down those who stole from the public purse, and hoping to hand them long sentences through the criminal justice system was not one of those methods.

“The notion that long sentences serve as a deterrent to crime is not correct. What is a deterrent to crime is the knowledge and understand­ing that you will not get away with it,” said Motlanthe. “That is what deters people from committing offences. When you know you will be caught and tried, even 18 months to two years is sufficient, as long as you know you will not get away with it.

“The problem we have now is that our criminal justice system grinds very slowly. I wish we were following the Al Capone method and nailed people on tax. The rest will follow,” he said.

“On tax, you could nail them tomorrow.”

If the country adopted this approach, said Motlanthe, ANC comrades’ conscience­s, particular­ly those serving in government where they have control over public funds, would be better.

“Conscience is what enables people to determine what is right and what is wrong, so you will not have to wait for a court of law to convict you because you will be holding yourself to different standards.

“You will know before you face charges that you have done wrong and that the honorable thing to do is to step down or step aside, otherwise your actions undermine and diminish the prestige of your organisati­on. You will know that if you are guided by your conscience.

“If you are in a leadership position and you hold people you lead accountabl­e on certain standards, when you yourself fall foul of those standards, your conscience should help you because you guide others on the understand­ing that you have as a leader.

“If you yourself fall foul of those standards, your conscience should help you, and if it fails, the collective should help you and if that [too] fails, then the taxman must help you,” said Motlanthe.

‘ ‘ Deterrent to crime is the knowledge you will not get away with it

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