The Citizen (Gauteng)

Zondo too slow: charge Zuptas

- Martin Williams

Zuptas should already be in jail. The Hawks and the National Prosecutin­g Authority are running out of excuses for not putting these crooks behind bars.

Don’t expect fireworks from Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo’s Commission of Inquiry into State Capture. Commission findings don’t necessaril­y lead to criminal prosecutio­n. They have no legal standing.

Any recommenda­tion by Zondo will remain a recommenda­tion and will not be binding on the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) or the Hawks. So in this instance Zondo has less authority than the office of the public protector. Remember the Zondo commission was establishe­d because of a binding recommenda­tion by former public protector Thuli Madonsela in her 2016 report, State of Capture.

As Professor Pierre de Vos has pointed out, no police officer has been successful­ly prosecuted for the 2012 Marikana massacre. This despite findings against the police in Judge Ian Farlam’s commission report. More than R300 million has been spent on inquiries, including Marikana (44 deaths), Life Esidimeni (144 deaths) and Judge Willie Seriti’s arms deal whitewash.

Such commission­s are tricks which the ANC learned from former oppressors. Commission­s deceive the people. Appointing a judge to lead a commission helps create the impression justice will be done. Consider the 1992 Judge Harms commission, appointed by former president FW de Klerk to investigat­e the existence of a police hit squad. As De Vos notes, “Harms concluded no hit squad operated in SA, a conclusion that turned out to be laughably false”.

Government-appointed commission­s seldom produce satisfacto­ry outcomes. Instead, justice is neutralise­d by the slow poison of me- dia saturation. Perhaps you are already tired of it. Zondo has two years to complete his report. By 2020, Ramaphosa could be ousted in the 2019 election, or his party could recall him. Long before that, many of us will succumb to state-Gupture fatigue.

The terms of reference for Zondo were decided on by former president Jacob Zuma, who had tried to avoid implementi­ng Madonsela’s recommenda­tions. The terms can be amended but they were set by a man who did not want the inquiry.

Is Zuma still influencin­g the process? Perception­s of this pressure may be exaggerate­d in reports of a “fightback” by Zuma loyalists. Yet we need to consider why Zondo was this week still complainin­g about a lack of cooperatio­n from government officials. Why are they not toeing the line? If they are afraid, what do they fear? And why are security clearances for Zondo inquiry staff being delayed?

Are Zuptas stalling the process? If the inquiry is being stymied by Zuptas, the security establishm­ent remains at least partially captured. Will Zuptas succeed in having the terms of reference broadened to include the apartheid years, thus further delaying any completion date. Kicking for touch.

Zuptas should already be in jail. The Hawks and the NPA are running out of excuses for not putting these crooks behind bars. Outa and Corruption Watch, among others, are queueing to offer detailed, admissible, damning evidence.

The country cannot wait for a Zondo damp squib. Zuma and his cronies must be charged as soon as possible. Shorn of their sheepish exboss, the NPA must do their job, now.

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