Woods "Alarmed" Over Maduna's Recommendation |
Publication | SABC News |
Date | 2001-01-16 |
Editor | Sapa |
Web Link | www.sabcnews.com |
Gavin Woods, chairman of the Parliament's public accounts
committee, said he is both concerned and alarmed at the government's move to
exclude the Heath unit from an investigation into the R43 billion arms deal.
He said there were a number of discrepancies in the reasons given by Penuell
Maduna, Justice Minister, for his recommendation yesterday to President Thabo
Mbeki that the unit should not take part in the probe.
Woods' committee recommended last year that the Heath unit and three other
agencies the Directorate of Public Prosecutions, the Auditor General and the
Public Protector carry out the investigation.
Yesterday he said one of the aspects that alarmed him most was Maduna's
implication that his formal request as committee chairman to the president in
December last year, for a proclamation clearing the way for Judge Willem Heath's
involvement, did not reflect the wishes of Parliament.
He said the committee report, adopted by Parliament, indicated quite clearly the
wish that Heath be involved.
"On that understanding, I wrote to the president."
Maduna had also suggested that the other three agencies did not want Heath to
take part.
Woods said he had correspondence which indicated that at least two of them did
want to work with Heath.
Discrepancies
The greatest discrepancy was Maduna's statement that to refer new matters to the
unit would be contrary to the spirit of a recent judgement on the
constitutionality of Heath's position as unit head.
The Constitutional Court has given a year's grace for the appointment of a head
who is not a judge.
Maduna, said Woods, did not say that referring new cases would be contrary to
the actual wording of the judgement.
"No-one has suggested that in that final year, Heath should not be given
further work to do," Woods added.
He also rejected Maduna's statement that there was no evidence of unlawful
appropriation of public funds or assets in the arms deal.
"To us and other parliaments around the world the hard facts of wrongdoing
are not necessarily what stimulates an investigation."
The committee had called for the probe after the Auditor General pointed out
procedural weaknesses in the procurement process, and its own hearings confirmed
that, and after officials involved were unable to answer questions
satisfactorily.
International experience was that these sorts of weaknesses were most likely to
lead to irregularities and wrongdoing.
He said it was "quite alarming" for a government minister, especially
a justice minister, to demand proof of wrongdoing before accepting the need for
an investigation. If there was any reason for doubt, it had to be checked out.
"Point by point we are analysing his letter (of recommendation to Mbeki),
and we are finding alarming discrepancies in his justification," he said.
Woods said that while he was concerned at Maduna's recommendation, he did not
know if he could contest "the inevitability of it".
He said he was concerned that the controversy should not damage working
relationships within the multi-party committee.
"One doesn't want to react emotionally. We're a committee that tries not to
be party political."
With acknowledgement to Sapa and SABC News.