ANC Calls For Report on NPA Investigations |
Publication |
Business Day |
Date | 2008-12-22 |
Reporter |
Sapa |
Web Link |
The ANC today called for the release of a memorandum detailing "political
meddling" by the Scorpions in investigations against the party’s Free State
chairperson.
"The African National Congress has for a considerable period of time expressed
concern about an increasing pattern of politically motivated actions by the NPA..."...
In this context, the ANC demands as a matter of national interest that a copy of
the said memorandum be made available to the ANC," party spokesman Carl Niehaus
said.
The call follows a report on Sunday in the City Press newspaper that a senior
Scorpions investigator in Bloemfontein had told his juniors and informers to
bring incriminating evidence against Ace Magashule. In a ten-paged memorandum
handed over to Scorpions investigations director advocate Thanda Mngwengwe, the
unit’s Bloemfontein staff claimed that the senior investigator’s conduct related
to cases
involving politicians was motivated by interests other than plain
professionalism.
They said chief special investigator Shadrack Sibiya, who heads the Scorpions’
investigations in the province, had on two occasions given instructions to a
junior to arrest Magashule earlier this year. "In one instance he (Sibiya) said
that the ANC said Magashule must be arrested before the ANC elections could take
place in Free State, and (in the) other instance he said that Magashule must be
arrested because the ANC was saying that he was causing trouble in the Free
State," the report said.
National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Tlali Tlali told City Press that the
memorandum had been redirected to Scorpions head advocate Sibongile Mzinyathi
and that an investigation was underway. "Preliminary
consideration of the allegations revealed that they are without basis or
substance. The NPA has,
however, decided that these allegations be
thoroughly investigated by a unit outside the DSO
(Directorate of Special Operations) and outside Bloemfontein," Tlali told the
paper.
With acknowledgements to
Hopewell Radebe and Business Day.