Harms’s Double Whammy |
Publication | Mail and Guardian |
Date |
2009-01-16 |
Web Link |
Not only have charges against JZ been reinstated, applying for a permanent
stay of prosecution might be trickier than he thought
Supreme Court of Appeal deputy president Louis Harms did more than reinstate
18 serious criminal charges against South Africa’s president-in-waiting. He also
reminded Jacob Zuma of a 1971 judgement he would rather have ignored.
The 38-year-old ruling supports the idea that
a prosecution can remain valid even if its motive
is questionable. This was a serious blow to any plans Zuma
might still have to apply for a permanent stay of prosecution.
On Monday Harms delivered the unanimous decision of a full Bench on the state’s
appeal against Judge Chris Nicholson’s September 12 ruling that declared the
charges against Zuma invalid. Harms castigated Nicholson’s judgement in
painful detail.
Part of the ruling focused on Nicholson’s interpretation of the relationship
between the National Prosecuting Authority and the justice minister. Nicholson
found there should be no relationship, with both performing their duties
independently of each other.
In this context he slammed former justice minister Penuell Maduna for being
present when former NPA boss Bulelani Ngcuka announced his decision not to
prosecute Zuma, even though the state had established a prima facie case.
Harms differed with Nicholson’s interpretation. “Although national legislation
must ensure that the NPA exercises its functions without fear, favour or
prejudice, the minister must exercise final responsibility over the NPA and the
NDPP [national director of public prosecutions] must determine prosecution
policy with the concurrence of the minister.”
He then threw a spanner ugly for Zuma
and gorgeous for the state in the works of Zuma’s theory
that his trial is the product of massive meddling by former president Thabo
Mbeki and his agents.
“A prosecution is not wrongful merely
because it is brought for an improper purpose. It will only be wrongful if, in
addition, reasonable and probable grounds for prosecuting are absent, something
not alleged by Mr Zuma and which in any event can be determined only once
criminal proceedings have been concluded.”
This Harms took from the 1971 ruling in Thompson v
Minister of Police.
What Harms was effectively telling Zuma is that it does not matter if Mbeki
abused the NPA to get him into the dock: if he has a case to answer, he must
face the music. If political meddling occurred it will be dealt with at the end
of the criminal trial.
This is a huge blow to Zuma’s strategy of bringing a permanent stay of
prosecution application as soon as the state resumes its case against him.
The basis for his argument has always been that he is the victim of a
nine-year-long conspiracy orchestrated by Mbeki and the NPA to prevent him from
becoming president of the ANC and South Africa.
Harms’s puncturing of a possible permanent stay argument went further. He ruled
that Zuma could not claim that he has been on trial for nine years and
criticised the ANC president for claiming that Mbeki and suspended NPA boss Vusi
Pikoli conspired during a trip to Chile in 2005 to have him prosecuted.
The SCA judgement finds that the legal proceedings against Zuma began in 2005,
when Pikoli announced he would be charged. But they came to an end in 2006, when
Judge Herbert Msimang struck the case from the roll.
In the current case the clock started ticking in December 2007 when Zuma was
subpoenaed to appear in court in August the following year.
Zuma cited the Chile trip in his court papers before Msimang as proof of the
conspiracy to get him behind bars.
Harms accepted the state’s explanation that Mbeki and Pikoli were both in
Chile, but had nothing to do with each other. “Whether Mr Zuma believes this or
not is another matter; courts are duty-bound to deal with proven fact.”
The NPA has indicated that it is ready to resume the prosecution and February 5
has been mentioned as a possible date for Zuma to return to the Pietermaritzburg
High Court.
Zuma’s allies have ruled out a plea
bargain and it is doubtful that the state, after hearing representations from
Zuma and the ANC, will agree to withdraw all 18 counts against the ANC
president.
The state is not bound by any approach to the
Constitutional Court to overturn the SCA judgement. It can proceed at the
earliest available date and summon Zuma back to court for the third time.
Former judge Willem Heath, who advised the ANC on its representations to the NPA,
criticised Harms’s judgement this week as “old school”.
“He took an old-school legal approach *1.
You find that with older judges who gained experience before we became a
constitutional dispensation. That’s why Nicholson differed. He gave a typical
constitutional law judgement.”
According to Heath “a range of issues *2”
in the Harms judgement provides a good basis for a
Constitutional Court appeal.
With acknowledgements to Mail and Guardian.