The Star Early Edition

Messenger in line of fire

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WEDNESDAY’S swoop by the Hawks on investigat­ive journalist Jacques Pauw’s guesthouse looking for “confidenti­al informatio­n and secret documentat­ion” used in is a matter for his book, serious concern.

Two captains and a colonel from the Crimes Against the State Unit – which would ordinarily investigat­e cases of terrorism and state security – were acting on complaints by the State Security Agency (SSA). The raid was launched specifical­ly at the behest of SSA director-general Arthur Fraser, who Pauw implicated in corruption in his bestsellin­g book and had been authorised by a magistrate.

is a petrifying journey into the darkest recesses of former president Jacob Zuma’s compromise­d government, a cabal that eliminates enemies and purges the upstanding from the law-enforcemen­t agencies. Pauw makes a number of startling revelation­s, including: Zuma failed to pay any tax at all in his first five years in office; that he was illegally paid a monthly R1 million salary by a private company, and that he has poor financial acumen.

This week comes against the backdrop of fears that although we have seen changes recently at a political level, that there had not been enough transforma­tion made at an operationa­l level in crime intelligen­ce.

Since Pauw’s book was published late last year, he has been investigat­ed by the police and had court applicatio­ns against him.

Constituti­onal law experts are at pains to point out that attempts to prosecute Pauw for his exposés in are foolhardy. His detractors will inadverten­tly prove that the author had used sensitive informatio­n from the SA Revenue Service and the SSA, thereby confirming large-scale wrongdoing had taken place. This would lead to a few red faces in high places.

For us in the media, we accept that no journalist, or any other citizen, is above the law. Yet the unremittin­g focus on the messenger is the expedient weapon of authoritar­ian government­s who have something to hide. They punish those exposing alleged wrongdoing rather than tackling those guilty of the abuse of power.

The action against Pauw, under an apartheid legislatio­n, bodes ill, particular­ly at this time when we step into a new era – an era of open, accountabl­e government. Pauw and many in his profession have played an important and courageous part in creating awareness of what had been happening under our noses.

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