Watchdog Toothless as Arms Probe goes Public |
Publication | Independent Online |
Date | 2001-05-06 |
Reporter | Sapa |
Web Link | www.iol.co.za |
Investigators on
Sunday confirmed that public hearings into the multi-billion rand arms deal
would begin soon and that several people would be "invited" to
testify.
However, it appears
that parliament's watchdog public accounts committee (Scopa) - which originally
called for a multi-agency probe into the deal - has been sidelined.
Scopa chairperson
Gavin Woods said on Sunday: "The committee is still pretty much in the dark
regarding the investigators' plans."
On whether the
committee had been sidelined, he said: "We have been sidelined. We had
interventions by the (national assembly) speaker, which by design created
uncertainty about accountability arrangements."
'The
committee is still pretty much in the dark'
"That uncertainty
has been exploited to the point that we are now in the dark."
Auditor-General
Shauket Fakie had even asked that Scopa members did not contact his staff about
the arms deal, Woods said.
Woods said he had
written to Speaker Frene Ginwala to clarify the issue of accountability
arrangements, but had yet to receive a response.
"She was the
person who put the issue on the table." When the committee discussed the
question of accountability with the investigating heads on December 13,
"their was no problem on their side", he said.
"It was only
after the intervention by Madam Speaker that I sensed a reluctance from
investigators to have any communication with us, except the obligatory periodic
report."
Patricia de Lille would be on
the list of witnesses
Woods said that
although the committee would not be unreasonable about aspects of the case that
should be confidential, "not withstanding that, I certainly feel , it is
appropriate to have a stronger communications to keep us in the picture".
Meanwhile, a
spokesperson for the multi-agency investigating team, Lynette van Rooyen said a
full media statement would be released later this week about the public
hearings.
It was expected that the hearings would take place in
Pretoria probably at the end of the month or the beginning of June.
The Sunday Times has
reported that military chiefs, cabinet ministers and Pan Africanist Congress MP
Patricia de Lille would be on the list of witnesses.
However, Van Rooyen
was unable to confirm this, saying details of the hearings were still being
finalised.
Stoffel Fourie, an advocate in the Public Protector's
office, reportedly said: "We will call all the witnesses necessary to bring
this matter into the open."
He
said there was no chance that the public hearings would jeopardise the criminal
inquiry.
"By carefully managing the process, we will see
to it that the public phase of the investigation does not lead evidence that
should be dealt with in the other (confidential) part," he said.
Fourie will lead the evidence, assisted by officials
from the National Directorate of Public Prosecutions.
With
acknowledgment to Sapa and Independent Online.