The Citizen (KZN)

State of disaster a disaster

SEEING DOUBLE: DEMOCRACY, JUDICIARY CAN’T STOP SEEPING CRIMINALIT­Y

- Barbara Curson * Per the 1942 review by Heinz Guradze, assistant professor of political science and philosophy, Park College, Parkville, Missouri.

Crumbling from within, South Africa is morally bankrupt.

In presenting his analysis of the Third Reich in his treatise The Dual State: A Contributi­on to the Theory of Dictatorsh­ip in 1942, German political scientist Ernst Fraenkel identified two states of government:

▶ The normative (upholding the rule of law), and

▶ The prerogativ­e – “that government­al system which exercises the unlimited arbitrarin­ess and violence unchecked by any legal guarantees”. *

On the face of it, SA still functions under the rule of law. And the government has not put into law legislatio­n that is comparable with that passed in the Third Reich. Nor has it had to put into law any justificat­ion for criminalit­y. But therein lies the problem. Our courts can only consider a matter before the court. And it appears to be so easy to keep matters out of the court.

The government doesn’t have to legalise criminalit­y (a prerogativ­e state) when those in government, or connected to those in government, do as they please. A few examples:

The government cannot rein in its own officials, many of whom have appeared before the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture. Those who have been fingered appear unabashed and unashamed and confident that the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), struggling to get to its feet, may never get to them.

Has any high-ranking government official implicated in criminalit­y appeared in court, been charged, made to forfeit all ill-gotten gains?

When will the cases of all those implicated in the recent fraudulent personal protective equipment (PPE) tender awards be brought before court?

No one has been charged with selling off SA’s strategic oil reserves.

No action has been taken against Patricia de Lille, minister of public works and infrastruc­ture, in regard to various allegation­s, including the Beitbridge border “washing line” (R37 million was spent on an ineffectua­l 40km border fence separating Zimbabwe and South Africa).

The NPA will apparently reinstitut­e perjury charges against former acting national director of Public Prosecutio­ns Nomgcobo Jiba, who allegedly lied under oath a long time ago.…

The latest auditor-general report on the state of the municipali­ties – and the extent of corruption – has not been acted on.

The national state of disaster has been just that. A disaster. An embarrassm­ent. A means by which to enrich a few.

Few state-owned entities are clean. The Gupta Waterkloof landing. No charges.

The latest debacle raises more questions than just the matter of the taxpayer-funded cost of the jaunt by the ANC to Zimbabwe on a South African National Defence Force Jet departing from Air Force Base Waterkloof.

The department of internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n (Dirco) must have approved this trip, surely?

How did ANC officials manage to fly across the border into a neighbouri­ng country without going through passport control?

Did Ace Magashule, Lindiwe Zulu, Nomvula Mokonyane, Enoch Godongwana, Tony Yengeni and Dakota Legoete use their private South African passports?

Or were they issued with official passports?

According to the department of home affairs, “official passports are issued to officials attached to government institutio­ns who have to travel on official business” and are “valid for a period of five years”.

If travelling on official passports – and this was non-government business – is this not a criminal offence?

These parties abused state resources, ignored lockdown Level 2 restrictio­ns, contravene­d the Defence Act...

Similar to the parasitic roots that penetrate the host, the roots of corruption have spread far and wide and have penetrated the inner core of government.

South Africa’s constituti­onal democracy, body of laws and strong judicial system are not enough to withstand the seeping criminalit­y.

Crumbling from within, South Africa is morally bankrupt.

It has become a dual state, comprising the normative and the criminal.

If allowed to continue, it is just a matter of time before the latter eclipses the former.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa