Tutu Calls for Arms-Deal Probe |
Publication | Mail and Guardian |
Date |
2008-03-27 |
Reporter |
Sapa |
Web Link |
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu on Thursday added his voice
to calls for a judicial inquiry into the
multibillion-rand arms deal.
In the prepared text of his speech for the Dullah Omar memorial lecture at the
University of the Western Cape, he said South Africans could not pretend
corruption was no longer a serious problem.
"We need to do something about the arms deal," he said.
"We owe it to those who paid a heavy price for our freedom, we owe it to
ourselves, we owe it to our future that a thorough independent judicial inquiry
happens as a matter of urgency.
"It is not going to go away."
He said the church had warned that South Africa's enemies were not
military, but poverty, disease and homelessness.
"To buy sophisticated machines we did not need, for
which we did not have the trained personnel, would be
laughable if it was not so serious."
Tutu's call for an inquiry into the deal echoes those made recently by
opposition parties, and follows the tabling of a fresh set of parliamentary
questions to President Thabo Mbeki about his role in it.
German prosecutors, who are probing the German consortium that supplied frigates
as part of the deal, reportedly allege bribes were paid to
both South African officials and members of Cabinet.
African National Congress president Jacob Zuma is due to go on trial in August
on a charge of corruption related to the deal.
With acknowledgements to Sapa and Mail and Guardian.