The Citizen (KZN)

Zondo part 3 is the big one

- William Saunderson-Meyer Jaundiced Eye @TheJaundic­edEye

Another Zondo report. Yawn. Not because it’s not important. On the contrary, it’s critical to SA’s slow escape from the primaeval slime that a decade of state capture has dumped us in. But it’s a yawn because we all know that the moment that Acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo handed over yet another damning indictment of the governing party shenanigan­s to the president, it became irrelevant. In a flash, it transmogri­fied from Zondo blockbuste­r to Ramaphosa block-blustering – just another report that Cyril Ramaphosa will ignore.

The list of ANC leaders implicated in state capture continues to expand. Former ministers Malusi Gigaba and Lynne Brown, as well as two serving Cabinet members, Communicat­ions and Digital Technologi­es Minister Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, and catch-of-the-day Energy Minister Gwede Mantashe are named.

They join the dozens named in Zondo part one. And at the centre of it all, like a malevolent spider, former president Jacob Zuma.

Since the Zondo reports have, so far, made not a single mention of Ramaphosa in the pillage of the country, but it is easy to forget that he sat at the Chief Spider’s side during the four worst years of state capture.

It is then with irony, but no apparent embarrassm­ent, that Ramaphosa again this week hailed the report as a “significan­t step in ridding the country of corruption”.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority appears to be gridlocked. After three years in the job, director Shamila Batohi’s excuses are threadbare.

And a simple example illustrate­s the hopelessly compromise­d nature of Ramaphosa’s “necessary steps”. In any democracy worthy of its name, Ntshavheni and Mantashe would have resigned upon being fingered.

The findings against Mantashe are particular­ly serious. The former ANC secretary-general is implicated in the capture of the Transnet board in order to loot the R300 billion locomotive procuremen­t fund.

Mantashe seems serenely unperturbe­d, confident of his indispensa­bility to Ramaphosa’s political survival. The Zondo report, he says, shouldn’t be used to settle party scores, but rather be used “to correct mistakes” and to rebuild the ANC.

To this end, the ANC has appointed a “task team”. Expect delay and prevaricat­ion as the president tries to ride out the months to the ANC’s December conference that will either confirm him for a second term or recall him.

But is the third Zondo report, to be released by the end of February, that most matters. This has the potential to be explosive in its effects on the ANC’s policy of cadre deployment, as well as on the credibilit­y of Ramaphosa.

Ramaphosa pleaded with Zondo not to find that cadre deployment should be scrapped, portraying it as a benign consultati­ve body. The deployment minutes for the past three years, released following the dogged efforts of the DA, show that to be a lie.

If Zondo finds Ramaphosa’s memory lapse explanatio­ns as implausibl­e and lacking in credibilit­y as he did Mantashe’s, the president’s stature and prospects will take a hefty blow.

Of course, if Zondo does so, he can kiss goodbye any chance he might have of being appointed to the position he so richly deserves, that of chief justice.

It has the potential to be explosive in its effects on the ANC’s policy of cadre deployment, as well as on the credibilit­y of Ramaphosa.

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