The Herald (South Africa)

Former Gauteng health MEC loses court bid against SIU report

- Aphiwe Deklerk TimesLIVE

Former Gauteng health MEC Dr Bandile Masuku has lost his court bid to overturn a Special Investigat­ing Unit report that led to his sacking.

Masuku was removed from the post late last year by premier David Makhura after an SIU report found he had failed in his duties as MEC during the alleged dodgy procuremen­t of Covid-19 personal protective equipment by his department.

His department awarded multimilli­on-rand contracts to Royal Bhaca‚ a company owned by the late Nkosi Madzikane Thandisizw­e Diko II‚ husband of Khusela Diko‚ the suspended spokespers­on of President Cyril Ramaphosa.

In his judgment‚ Roland Sutherland of the North Gauteng High Court dismissed Masuku’s applicatio­n with costs.

“In my view‚ the SIU was not at all irrational in forming its opinion,” Sutherland said.

“The SIU saw no crime having been committed by Dr Masuku.

“The SIU saw no basis for civil action against Dr Masuku.

“Indeed‚ it decided there was no action it could or should take.

“The SIU faithfully reported what it had learnt to the premier and to the president.

“It deemed Dr Masuku’s conduct to be wanting.

“To form such an opinion is plainly within its scope of functions.

“No irrational­ity can exist in the SIU being disappoint­ed by Dr Masuku’s discharge of his role.

“That Dr Masuku held a different view about his accountabi­lity is unimportan­t.

“The SIU has no obligation to defer to Dr Masuku’s perspectiv­e‚ which he voiced fully and was part of the matrix of facts investigat­ed.”

He said Masuku’s rebuttal about his knowledge of the alleged corruption in his department was simply to protest that he was entitled to remain wholly detached even in a pandemic.

“When news of impropriet­ies was brought to his attention‚ he was content to fob off the investigat­ion to the internal auditors and take no steps to inform himself at all to assess the status quo and intervene urgently‚” Sutherland said.

He further criticised Masuku for being “deaf and blind” to the risks of alleged irregulari­ties in his department and that he took no steps to protect it.

“The first aspect is that Dr Masuku was neglectful in his duties‚ as illustrate­d by his failure to attend to his e-mails‚ despite being in a critical leadership position.

“This conduct justifies an adverse inference about his lack of profession­alism and lack of care in dischargin­g his functions. His version given to the SIU was faithfully reproduced.

“What he is criticised for is not lying — his ignorance was taken at face value‚ despite the scepticism it fully deserved — but for neglect‚” Sutherland said.

The judge said Makhura had not been instructed by the SIU to fire Masuku, but was given an opinion that there was a case of neglect by the former MEC.

“The premier had no obligation in law to give that opinion any weight‚ nor is there any basis in the evidence to hint that the premier thought he was bound by the recommenda­tion‚ nor indeed whether the premier drew his own conclusion­s from the raw facts discovered or gave weight to the recommenda­tions.

“Moreover‚ whether the removal of a political office-bearer is an instance of administra­tive action is a question not necessary to address in this judgment,” Sutherland said.

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