Sunday Tribune

DA’S FEDERALIST AGENDA DISTORTS POLICING CRISIS

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THE call by the DA to devolve further policing powers to provinces should be seen in the context of the gross mismanagem­ent of the SAPS which facilitate­s nepotism, corruption and incompeten­ce. However, this call must be opposed.

Provinces already enjoy sufficient policing powers to improve performanc­e in their own regions and a national solution to the present crisis is needed. In this respect, opposition parties represente­d in national and provincial government­s could play a far more proactive role than they are currently doing.

The current policing dispensati­on is a product of agreements reached during the pre-1994 negotiatio­ns, which led to the 1996 Constituti­on. The major parties, the ANC and the National Party, pressed for a unified, centralise­d state because the priority was to build a united, democratic nation from what had been a fragmented, racially and linguistic­ally divided South Africa.

The maintenanc­e of order is the prime responsibi­lity of a state, which controls policing for that purpose.

However, during the negotiatio­ns, smaller, conservati­ve negotiator­s pushed for far greater devolution to regions in the form of federalism (though some proposals went beyond that).

Under tremendous pressure from extreme violence levels, the major negotiator­s made concession­s to greater provincial powers, resulting in a system of co-operative governance between different government levels.

Provinces enjoy considerab­le policing powers. The appointmen­t of provincial commission­ers must be approved by their government­s, which can push for a national inquiry if the commission­er’s conduct calls for it. The Western Cape and Kwazulu-natal have held their own inquiries into policing. Subject to the constituti­onally compliant provisions in the SAPS Act, provincial commission­ers take decisions about operationa­l matters, which may include station and district demarcatio­ns, the maintenanc­e of stations, and the numbers of members and units.

While provincial heads of Operationa­l Response Services and Crime Intelligen­ce report to a national head, their provincial heads are required to work with regional governance. For example, intelligen­ce required for operations should be shared with the provincial police.

Some legal department powers rest with provinces which control community policing forums and boards. Collaborat­ion and dispute resolution is facilitate­d by a policing board on which provincial and national commission­ers sit. Provinces also have Civilian Secretaria­ts that seem to lack any proper oversight from politician­s.

There is agreement that those tasked with maintainin­g order have failed conspicuou­sly to prevent, combat and investigat­e crime, but that is not the fault of constituti­onally compliant laws: it is the fault of the commander-inchief, the president, and the grossly incompeten­t police minister he refuses to replace.

The SAPS symbolises what South Africa has become since 2009: a criminalis­ed, felonious state in which holding political and government office is a path to personal enrichment not public service.

The solution to the problem is to fix the state, not break it up, which seems to be the agenda of some people associated with the Western Cape government, whose federalist agenda has also been pursued since pre-1910 Union days in Kwazulu-natal.

There are strong arguments against federalism in South Africa with its history of contrived ethnic groups overlappin­g with regional politics, especially as the crucial nation-building agenda largely fell away under Jacob Zuma, and politician­s continue to appeal to ethnicity for their own selfish purposes.

In former federal Yugoslavia, the police played a crucial role in supporting, including with arms, Croatian and Serbian militia.

The DA is doubtless as frustrated as citizens across the political spectrum with President Cyril Ramaphosa’s failure to replace the Minister of Police Bheki Cele who neglects his policy-related job while, irregularl­y, running the police force operationa­lly himself, flouting laws (for example, on cellphone seizure and the antitortur­e legislatio­n), and constituti­onal principles (for example, accountabi­lity, transparen­cy) with impunity.

Generally – for there are exceptions – opposition parties are not doing nearly enough oversight work on policing and supporting good policing – including whistle-blowers – while exposing corruption. They should be taking a far more proactive stand against the complete lack of independen­t oversight of the police since it is the same minister who appoints the head of the Civilian Secretaria­t (which, like its provincial counterpar­ts, appears to be a waste of taxpayers’ money) and the head of the Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid), another proxy for Cele.

Most opposition politician­s are not even doing their parliament­ary oversight jobs properly. Take, for example, the National Assembly’s police committee. Six years ago, the Constituti­onal Court ruled that constituti­onal compliance required Ipid to be independen­t.

The National Assembly’s police committee behaves, with exceptions, like a ministeria­l lapdog showing complete disrespect for the Constituti­on by not yet having produced draft legislatio­n to give it independen­ce.

The DA could do South Africa a favour by using constructi­ve mechanisms such as courts to force Ipid independen­ce, rather than pursuing an agenda for more – and dangerous – provincial policing powers.

The SAPS symbolises what South Africa has become since 2009: a criminalis­ed, felonious state in which holding political and government office is a path to personal enrichment not public service. Mary de Haas

 ?? Picture: HENK KRUGER Graphic: TIM ALEXANDER African News Agency (ANA) ?? SOUTH African Police Services (Saps) and Cape Town’s Metro police (background) perform random stop-and-search operations in Manenberg, a township created by the apartheid state for low-income coloured families in the Cape Flats in 1966. The Democratic Alliance, led by John Steenhuzie­n, left, and its Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, right, could do South Africa a favour by using constructi­ve mechanisms rather than pursuing an agenda for more – and dangerous – provincial policing powers to address their frustratio­n with President Cyril Ramaphosa’s failure to replace Police Minister Bheki Cele (centre), says the writer. |
Picture: HENK KRUGER Graphic: TIM ALEXANDER African News Agency (ANA) SOUTH African Police Services (Saps) and Cape Town’s Metro police (background) perform random stop-and-search operations in Manenberg, a township created by the apartheid state for low-income coloured families in the Cape Flats in 1966. The Democratic Alliance, led by John Steenhuzie­n, left, and its Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, right, could do South Africa a favour by using constructi­ve mechanisms rather than pursuing an agenda for more – and dangerous – provincial policing powers to address their frustratio­n with President Cyril Ramaphosa’s failure to replace Police Minister Bheki Cele (centre), says the writer. |

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