Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Minister Cele’s ‘irregular’ involvemen­t questioned

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SOUTH Africans could be forgiven for thinking that Minister of Police Bheki Cele is the National SAPS Commission­er.

He hogs the limelight when there are massacres, and arranges patrols, overshadow­ing the commission­er whose job he has usurped.

Minister Cele – disgraced as a national commission­er himself – is out of order in engaging in operationa­l matters. Parliament confirms such conduct is irregular, yet takes no remedial action.

Cele’s interferen­ce is an extreme example of how ministers were allowed – even encouraged – to micromanag­e during the State Capture years.

The country is becoming increasing­ly lawless, and if SAPS, under Cele’s direction, continues to act above the law itself, it can only get worse.

As a member of our executive authority, the minister of police is responsibl­e, in terms of Section 85 of the Constituti­on, for the developmen­t of policy, the implementa­tion of existing legislatio­n, and the initiation of new legislatio­n.

Evaluated as a minister on these grounds, Cele fails hopelessly.

The Marikana massacre highlighte­d the urgent need for proper operationa­l response training, yet the report

commission­ed to provide recommenda­tions, although completed in 2018, was released by the ministry only in 2021, too late to ensure an adequate response to the July 2021 mayhem.

The new legislatio­n developed under Cele’s watch, such as the revised Firearms and SAPS bills, is so bad it had to be returned to the ministry by Parliament. He is unable to explain why, with a budget of almost R96 billion in the current year, there are 20 000 fewer SAPS members now than in 2010 when the budget was just more than R53.5bn.

Instead of ensuring that the law is upheld, he is party to it being broken, with impunity, including by members who report to him.

Many current policing problems, including the impact on the SAPS budget of salaries and perks for unnecessar­ily inflated management structures of generals and brigadiers, are the consequenc­e of his tenure as commission­er, and those who followed him – Riah Phiyega and Acting Commission­er Khomotso Phahlane.

Phahlane was initially exposed for corruption in the Forensic Laboratory during Cele’s tenure.

The nepotistic networks entrenched during state capture still exist and, under his watch, are being entrenched, not dismantled.

National commission­er Khehla Sitole had to go, not for incompeten­ce, but because he tried to assert his independen­ce, including in appointmen­ts, which was his prerogativ­e.

His replacemen­t, General Fannie Masemola, has a long working relationsh­ip with the minister from when Cele was KZN MEC and Masemola was a deputy provincial commission­er. He then became Cele’s deputy when he was appointed national commission­er in 2009.

That a task team investigat­ing political killings in KZN should report to Cele is grossly irregular. He remains deeply embedded in the politics of the province, and his own long-standing colleagues are potential suspects in some of these killings, including that of Umzimkhulu corruption fighter Sindiso Magaqa.

The trial of suspects, two of whom were members of Cele’s Tactical Response Team, has started, yet crucial evidence is missing.

A leaked intelligen­ce report revealed that the hit on Magaqa was orchestrat­ed by members of KZN Crime Intelligen­ce. The report was allegedly handed by then crime intelligen­ce head Peter Jacobs to his MK comrade, Cele, who denies having received it.

Details of who ordered the Magaqa hit remain classified.

Members of this ministeria­l team harassed and maliciousl­y arrested Magaqa’s close friend, whistle-blower, Thabiso Zulu, and illegally seized his phones (without a court order), ruining one of them. There have been no prosecutio­ns for the continued harassment, threats, and attempted murder of Zulu, which implicate state intelligen­ce members.

The minister is also interferin­g in issues relating to the illegal dismissals of hundreds of competent police members by corrupt management. Those working for their reinstatem­ent say they are told the dismissed members must stop criticisin­g Cele if he is to assist them. Reinstatem­ent involves legal processes in which a minister has no right whatsoever to interfere.

Cele is implicated in recently announced acting national management appointmen­ts of people who are not only incompeten­t (the new crime intelligen­ce head has no experience in that component) but are linked to the Ace Magashula Free State cabal.

Cele’s oath to uphold the Constituti­on is meaningles­s, as he ignores it.

If the SAPS, under his direction, continue to act above the law, South Africa is heading down the police state road. The crux of the problem is the complete ineffectiv­eness of oversight bodies – especially IPID and the Civilian Secretaria­t – which he controls.

The NPA has also abrogated its policing responsibi­lity.

Worst of all, Parliament, the citizens’ voice, is failing us.

Five years after having been ordered by the Concourt to pass legislatio­n ensuring Ipid’s independen­ce, its failure to do so borders on criminal.

Without urgent interventi­on, including from the Presidency, anarchic trends will continue, dragging us further into the clutches of criminals.

 ?? MARY DE HAAS ?? Honorary research fellow at the University of KZN’s School of Law, and a member of the Navi Pillay Research Group on justice and human rights.
MARY DE HAAS Honorary research fellow at the University of KZN’s School of Law, and a member of the Navi Pillay Research Group on justice and human rights.

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