The Citizen (Gauteng)

Parly home affairs boss not ‘giving muffins’

- Amanda Watson

“Don’t lie to us,” cautioned parliament’s portfolio committee on home affairs’ chair Hlomane Chauke at the start of Tuesday’s hearings on the naturalisa­tion of the controvers­ial Gupta family – he is not running a “spaza shop parliament”.

The hearing ran until the early hours of yesterday with it wanting to get Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba’s testimony in.

“If it is found that you lied to parliament, and when you raise that oath statement that we read for you, it tells you of consequenc­es that will happen,” Chauke said.

He noted people who thought he was running a “spaza shop parliament” and expected to be given “a muffin” before being sent away had the wrong idea.

“This time around it is not going to happen.”

First, the picture of Ashu Chawla was to be confirmed. “Because this will be the only person in the country that can take an ID picture with their sunglasses,” Chauke said.

Thulani Mavuso, acting director-general of home affairs said spectacles were allowed in ID photos, not sunglasses.

“So, what we tried specifical­ly to do was to check that copy and we could not authentica­te whether that was an original or whether that was a digitally manipulate­d copy,” Mavuso said.

“If we were to get an original copy we would be able to do it.”

A quick search through the leaked Gupta e-mails revealed a copy of a smiling Chawla’s ID – with his sunglasses on, next to a copy of his now expired Absa credit card. It was issued in August, 2003.

“At the time we were doing green ID books, we were not archiving the photo so every time you come and apply, the old photo gets replaced by the new photo,” Mavuso said.

Since the 1950 Identifica­tion Act came into being people were required to “at his or her own expense furnish two prescribed copies of a recent photograph of himself or herself to the director-general”. One went into the identity document, and the other is entered into population register – a requiremen­t of the Identity Act.

And in all the iterations of the Act since the ’50s, the clause has remained – which means according Mavuso’s testimony, there are millions of ID photos stapled to identity documents lying trashed somewhere.

Thulani Mavuso, acting director-general of home affairs said spectacles were allowed in ID photos, not sunglasses.

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