Sunday Tribune

WILL RAMAPHOSA’S CREDIBILIT­Y WITHSTAND SCRUTINY FROM THE ZONDO COMMISSION?

- SIPHO SEEPE

BY THE time President Cyril Ramaphosa appears at the state capture commission he will have used all the aces up his sleeves. If this was a battle, it was one for him to lose. Never have forces and political developmen­ts been so aligned in favour of an individual.

The first ace up his sleeve is that he can count on the increasing­ly favourable media to back him. Ours is a toxic media environmen­t in which certain individual­s are sacrosanct. They can do no wrong.

Their glaring failures or transgress­ions are either explained away or considered as minor detail that should be ignored in the interest of a bigger picture that they represent a struggle between forces of good against evil.

Others are not so lucky. They can never do anything right. They are guilty by mere suspicion and mere accusation­s. Reduced to beasts of prey they must perforce be subjected to unrelentin­g scorn and ridicule.

The mainstream media played a critical role in supporting Ramaphosa’s presidenti­al campaign. All indication­s are this same media will not abandon him, especially in this hour of need.

Veteran journalist Justice Malala forcefully argues that there is “no accountabi­lity in the Ramaphosa administra­tion” (Sunday Times January 10, 2021).

It must really be nice to be in Ramaphosa’s administra­tion.

Imagine we were back in the year, say, 2016 and a virus had come along and killed thousands of South Africans.

Imagine the revelation that 29 other countries had begun inoculatin­g their population­s, while South African had not concluded any agreements for direct supply with pharmaceut­ical companies.

Jacob Zuma, who was president at the time, would have been eaten alive. People like me would have written long columns calling for heads to roll. Ministers and directors-general would have been asked to resign. There would have been threats of marches, lawsuits and parliament­ary inquiries.

Not so in the age of Ramaphosa.

This administra­tion, after a spectacula­r shambles in the handling of the vaccine roll-out and clear lack of strategy, is continuing in its opaque ways, with little or no noise from most quarters. There is no accountabi­lity, no taking responsibi­lity and no consequenc­es.

Our government has been sitting on its hands for months and we are silent.

The second ace in favour of Ramaphosa is the judiciary.

There is enough evidence from the remarks they make in their ruling to suggest they reduced themselves to being propagandi­sts of political factions in the ANC. Their judgments reflect their master’s voice couched in legal jargon.

In the unlikely event that the state capture commission were to find against him, Ramaphosa can count on his review applicatio­n succeeding in the courts.

There can be no clearer judicial bias than comments by a full bench of a Gauteng High Court. The three judges opined that the “new dawn that engulfed the country in 2018 did not miss Eskom Holdings SOC Limited (Eskom)”.

“It brought life to Eskom in that in January 2018, Eskom’s old and inactive leadership was replaced by new leadership with new life to undo years of maladminis­tration and corruption within the organisati­on.” But facts prove otherwise.

The “new dawn” at Eskom has brought load-shedding back and has asked the nation to brace itself for the “new dusk” in the next five years.

Judge Dhaya Pillay also nailed her proverbial colours to the mast. As former president Zuma reminds.

Pillay has called Zuma a “a wedge driver with poisonous tongue”, has “issued a warrant of arrest against (him) as she refused to accept a medical report from the surgeongen­eral of the South African National Defence Force”.

She could not resist in pointing out that removing Zuma was in the interest of the ANC.

This judge, a publicly declared friend of Gordhan, another selfdeclar­ed nemesis of Zuma, is a member of a judicial panel that is expected to pronounce on the guilt or otherwise of the former president in the case involving Zuma and the Zondo Commission.

The Constituti­onal Court further compounded the problem of undue prejudice to Zuma by labelling him accused #1. In doing so it usurped the authority of a magistrate’s court to deal with the matter under the Commission­s Act. This effectivel­y circumvent­s Zuma’s right to have his review applicatio­n heard in the high court.

The third ace in Ramaphosa’s deck relates to political developmen­ts in his own party.

The ANC NEC’S decision in which it directs that those of its members accused or allegedly accused of corruption be given 30 days to step aside has effectivel­y put Ramaphosa’s opponents on the ropes. It is just a matter of time before they are disrobed of their ANC regalia.

Ramaphosa goes to the commission with wind in his sail. The fourth ace in his favour is the chairperso­n of the commission,

Judge Raymond Zondo. In handling anything that has to do with

Zuma, Zondo has been openly and embarrassi­ngly biased.

At the same time, Zondo spared no effort in trying to shield Ramaphosa from accusation­s of impropriet­y. One should recall how the former chief executive officer of Eskom, Brian Molefe, was hurriedly interrupte­d when it became clear that his testimony seemed to implicate Ramaphosa for having engaged in unlawful misconduct during his tenure as deputy president of the country.

When the hearing resumed, Zondo focused on doing damage control, insisting that Molefe must concede that he (Molefe) is not making any accusation­s against the president.

Molefe reminded Zondo that he (Molefe) was only there assist the commission by providing the facts, nothing more. It was up to Zondo and the investigat­ors to decide what to do with the facts.

The joker in this case is that the position of chief justice will soon be vacant. Ramaphosa will decide who becomes the next chief justice.

Zondo has worked too hard to destroy his chances. Ramaphosa can count on Zondo. There will be no tough questions. It will be another public relations exercise.

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 ?? African News Agency (ANA) ?? EMOTIONS are running high ahead of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s appearance at the state capture probe chaired by Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo. |
African News Agency (ANA) EMOTIONS are running high ahead of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s appearance at the state capture probe chaired by Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo. |

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