Corruption: a fine balance of forces |
Publication |
Helen Suzman Foundation |
Date | 2010-10-01 Issue 31 |
Reporter | Patrick Laurence |
Patrick Laurence argues that
the war against corruption has entered a
critical phase.
Summary - Eighty per cent of South
Africans believe that corruption is one
of the main problems facing our new
democracy. Yet fewer than 11 per cent
have had direct personal experience of
it. The perception that corruption is
pervasive in our society is due largely
to the vigilance of the media in
reporting suspected cases, particularly
those involving politicians and civil
servants, and it is reinforced by the
number of high-ranking ANC members who
are involved. Allan Boesak, Cynthia
Maropeng, Tony Yengeni and Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela have all been
convicted of improprieties, and
suspicions now extend to the cabinet,
with deputy president Jacob Zuma,
defence minister Mosiuoa Lekota and
former transport minister Mac Maharaj
under a cloud. Many believe these
developments make a mockery of the ANC's
commitment to open, honest governance.
However, the party's track record looks
less reprehensible when compared to that
of past NP governments. Three senior
members of the last NP government were
imprisoned for corruption and their
offences are probably only the tip of
the iceberg. Whatever deficiencies exist
today, there is nothing comparable to
the NP's unlawful use of public money to
establish death squads or to fund
pro-government propaganda. Nor does
corruption here look bad when compared
with corruption overseas: South Africa
ranked 38th (out of 102) on the
International Corruption Perceptions
Index for 2002. This is not grounds for
complacency but it belies the
Afro-pessimists' belief that black
government inevitably means a morass of
bribery and greed. The government has
taken commendable measures to prevent
abuses. It established a national
anti-corruption forum in co-operation
with business and civil society, and
created the Special Investigating Unit,
the Asset Forfeiture Unit and the
Scorpions to act as powerful frontline
anti-corruption forces. It has also
drafted new legislation that prescribes
penalties of up to 15 years imprisonment
for officials who solicit or accept
'gratification'. Nevertheless, the DA's
Raenette Taljaard is sceptical. She
argues that corrupt officials escape
prosecution because of confusion about
which unit is responsible for specific
offences, and she questions whether the
ANC has the will to fight corruption
when so many high-ranking ANC members
are prime suspects. She notes that after
Joe Modise's death the ANC halted the
investigation into allegations that he
benefited from the arms deal; it dragged
its feet regarding allegations against
Allan Boesak; and it defended Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma when she mismanaged public
funds during her tenure as minister of
health. The ANC also prevented Scopa
(the Standing Committee on Public
Accounts) from exercising its oversight
responsibilities regarding the arms
deal. And Mbeki, she points out, is
quick to accuse critics of racism
instead of investigating their
accusations. In summary, there is a
commendable array of laws and
institutions to fight corruption but
these are threatened by the ANC's
tendency to protect its leaders and to
play the race card against critics.
Several new developments have occurred
since the article on corruption in this
issue was completed: 1) the Scorpions
sent 35 questions to Jacob Zuma as part
of their investigation into allegations
that he solicited a protection fee from
a French armaments company; these were
subsequently published in the Sunday
Times; 2) Zuma accused the Scorpions and
director of public prosecutions Bulelani
Ngcuka of leaking the questions to the
newspaper; 3) ANC secretary-general
Kgalema Motlanthe criticised Ngcuka's
conduct of the investigation; 4) the
future of the Scorpions as an
independent agency was threatened. Each
of these is fraught with serious
implications but the prospect that the
Scorpions could become a subordinate
unit of the SAPS is the most disturbing
of all, since they are the most visible
indication of the government's
commitment to eradicate corruption even
at the highest levels. The light
sentences imposed on Tony Yengeni and
Mosiuoa Lekota by the ANC disciplinary
committee have already sent worrying
messages about the party's will to
pursue the anti-corruption campaign
without favour. What is urgently needed
now is a speedy investigation into the
allegations against Zuma; if there is a
case against him, he must be indicted as
soon as possible.
An overwhelming majority
of South Africans rate corruption as one
of the main problems facing the
post-apartheid order and, by
implication, one on which the future
welfare of their emerging nation
depends. But the marked discordance
between their perception and experience
of corruption demands explanation.
The Country Assessment Report on
Corruption, co-authored by the African
National Congress-led government and the
United Nations office on drugs and
crime, records that eight in every ten
South Africans believe "there is a lot
of corruption" in the fledgling society
that came into existence with so much
hope less than a decade ago. For that
reason they think corruption should be
ranked high among the priority issues
confronting the government.
As the report notes, however, there is
an incongruity between the actual
experience of corruption by South
African citizens, from the ordinary man
or woman in the street to officials in
the civil service, and their almost
visceral conviction that it is
widespread. Extrapolating from surveys
quoted in the report, it is evident that
direct experience of corruption varies
from a minuscule two per cent for
individuals to 11 per cent for families
or households.
A similar though less shrill dissonance
is manifest between psychological
perception and empirical experience in
the business community: 62 per cent of
businessmen and women categorise
corruption as a serious issue in the
business community against the
relatively small percentage from whom a
bribe has been either solicited (15 per
cent) or who have had to pay a bribe or
an extortion fee (seven and four per
cent respectively).
Two complimentary factors help to
account for the discrepancy. One is the
vigilance of the media in reporting
actual or alleged cases of corruption,
particularly those pertaining to
politicians in the legislative and
executive branches of government and to
civil servants entrusted with the
delivery of social services. Hardly a
day goes by without a major report of
corruption in one form or another. The
media's portrayal of corruption as a
frequent and ubiquitous occurrence in
the new South Africa is reinforced by
the number of top ranking members of the
ruling African National Congress (ANC)
who have either been indicted by the
courts for crimes that are classifiable
as corruption - including bribery,
extortion, fraud and theft of public
money or donor money - or who are
suspected of having committed these
offences.
ANC notables whose probity has been
blemished by court convictions include,
in chronological order:
Allan Boesak, the former provincial leader of the ANC in the Western Cape, who was sentenced to imprisonment for three years for stealing money entrusted to him for the poor by Scandinavian donors;
Cynthia Maropeng, former deputy speaker of the Mpumalanga legislature who is serving a seven-year prison sentence for pilfering money intended for ANC constituency projects;
Tony Yengeni, former ANC parliamentary chief whip who faces a four year prison sentence (against which he has appealed) for defrauding parliament; and
Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, who is seeking to avert imprisonment by appealing against her conviction on multiple counts of fraud and theft in the Pretoria High Court, for which she was sentenced to jail for five years.
The impression that the
ANC is struggling to contain corruption
within its own ranks is strengthened by
suspicions of financial improbity
against men who are either situated in
the uppermost echelons of the ANC or who
have served in them in the past. Among
them are two men who occupy the second
and third highest positions in the ANC
hierarchy after president Thabo Mbeki
himself: Jacob Zuma and Mosiuoa Lekota,
who respectively serve as deputy
president and national chairman of the
ANC. These two men occupy appropriately
high positions in the national cabinet:
those of deputy president and minister
of defence respectively. A man who is in
a similar predicament is Mac Maharaj,
the immediate past minister of
transport. He is now a director of
FirstRand.
The allegation against Zuma is that he
solicited a protection fee of R500 000 a
year from Thales, the French-based
armaments company that in an earlier
form, when it was known as Thompson-CSF,
won a contract to supply combat suites
to four corvettes or frigates on order
for the South African Navy. Zuma has
vigorously and repeatedly denied the
allegations. But investigation of them
by the elite Directorate for Special
Operations, aka the Scorpions, signals
that they are taken seriously and not
dismissed as malicious slander. Zuma's
close association with Durban
businessman, Schabir Shaik, does not
help his cause. The controversial Shaik
is himself under investigation for
alleged unlawful possession of cabinet
documents relating to the contentious
multi-billion rand arms deal.
The shadow of impropriety has fallen
across Lekota because of his failure to
declare his business interests in wine
and petroleum in the Free State and
property in KwaZulu-Natal, as required
by the parliamentary code of conduct and
the Executive Members Ethics Act. Lekota
avers that his failure to do so was an
accidental oversight rather than a
wilful act. An ANC disciplinary hearing
is in the offing.
A similar silhouette of disgrace hovers
over Maharaj since the publication in
the Sunday Times of detailed allegations
that he and his wife received payments
and gifts valued at more than R500 000
from the controversial Schabir Shaik
during or immediately after Maharaj's
tenure as minister of transport. Shaik
is the CEO of Nkobi Holdings, which, in
turn, is part of a consortium that won
the lucrative N3 toll road contract from
the transport ministry when Maharaj
headed it. An investigation into the
allegations by auditing firm Deloitte &
Touche has been ordered by First Rand.
Maharaj is on leave of absence pending
the outcome of the investigation.
In the eyes of its political adversaries
these developments have blighted the
ANC's election promises of 1994 and 1999
to govern in an open and honest manner
and, of course, to take a tough stand
against corruption. Thus human rights
activist Rhoda Kadalie, who has won a
reputation for her trenchant criticism
of ANC policies and their
implementation, writes of the morally
debilitating impact on governance of
"serial acts of corruption". Raenette
Taljaard, spokesperson for the
Democratic Alliance (DA) on finance,
takes an even tougher line in a
statement entitled The ANC and
Corruption - Failing to Act is Acting to
Fail.
In that statement Taljaard juxtaposes
president Mbeki's emphasis on the need
to enhance moral renewal with the sight
that greeted South Africans who observed
the opening of parliament in February.
"They see a motley crew under
investigation while the new South Africa
is under construction," she states. She
identifies four people by name: Yengeni,
Madikizela-Mandela, Zuma, who she
accuses of maintaining a "stony silence"
on whether or not he met the top man
from Thales in November 1998 or March
2000, and newly-acquired ANC ally
Martinus van Schalkwyk of the New
National Party (whom she includes
because of the alleged corrupt dealings
of his "apparatchiks", Peter Marais and
David Malatsi). A barbed rhetorical
question follows: "What moral renewal
edifice will we build on the foundations
of quicksand?"
These statements form part of the
incessant but justifiable scrutiny and
appraisal of government actions by
opposition parties and civil society in
fulfilment of their commitment to the
maintenance of good governance. The
results of their surveillance offer a
gloomy perspective.
Another more positive perspective
emerges, however, when the ANC-led
government is compared with the record
of successive National Party (NP)
governments between 1948 and 1994.
Hennie van Vuuren, who heads a
corruption-monitoring unit at the
Institute for Security Studies, refuses
to even consider comparison between the
old and new regimes. His rationale is
that it is futile to compare "rotten
apples" with apples. He may have a
point. But, even if the two situations
are not strictly comparable, it is
instructive to assess corruption under
the ANC-led government in the historical
context of decades of NP government.
It is pertinent to recall that a senior
member of the last NP government, Pietie
du Plessis, was imprisoned for
misappropriating trustee funds. It
should be noted, too, that two deputy
ministers in the dying days of NP
suffered the humiliation of imprisonment
for monetary greed:
Hennie van der Walt, a deputy minister in the now disbanded department of co-operation and development was imprisoned for embezzlement, having earlier won an unenviable niche in South African history by defending the use of the word piccannin in parliament in the twilight of the former regime; and
Abe Williams, a
former deputy minister of social
development, who found himself on
the wrong side of the law and in
prison for succumbing to the
temptation of bribery.
These transgressions
almost certainly represent the
proverbial tip of the iceberg, given the
repressive legislation that the previous
regime placed on the statute book to
strengthen its capacity to deal with
subversion and to halt the free flow of
information and cover up the
misdemeanours of its apparatchiks in the
police force and the defence force. The
licensed killers in the "terrorist
detection unit" at Vlakplaas and in the
Orwellian-sounding Civil Co-operation
Bureau, have, of course, won notoriety
through their pitiless war against those
they designated as "enemies of the
state". But close examination of their
modus operandi shows that they often had
a taste for the good life and, as
behoves a political mafia, a talent for
making their actions profitable as well
as murderous.
Whatever the deficiencies of the ANC
government in the fight against
corruption, there is nothing comparable
to the unlawful and covert use of huge
sums of public money by the National
Party to establish clandestine death
squads as part of its strategy of total
defence of the existing order. Nor is
there any parallel in the ANC's record
of governance to the previous regime's
furtive diversion of public funds to
establish a newspaper, The Citizen, to
wage political war on its behalf and to
hire journalist mercenaries in the
United States as proxies in its war
against "terrorists" and their
"communist allies". The NP's moral
trespasses serve as a reminder of what
can happen if corruption is not checked
timeously and if the ruling party begins
to flirt with the dangerous notion that
the end justifies the means.
Transparency International provides
another context that needs to be borne
in mind. South Africa is ranked 38th out
of 102 countries on its International
Corruption Perceptions Index for 2002.
South Africa is the third
highest-ranking African country after
Botswana and Namibia. Though South
Africa's 38th place may not be
particularly gratifying to those proud
members of the ANC who take its
commitment to open and clean government
seriously, it does not - or should not -
bolster "Afro-pessimists" who believe
black government inevitably means
descent into a morass of corruption and
greed. Nor should it be taken to mean
there is no need for concern. The price
of honest government, like that of
liberty, is eternal vigilance. To that
end the ANC-led government must be
credited for putting in place measures
and institutions to act as sentinels
against corruption.
Many government departments have either
established or are in the process of
establishing dedicated internal
anti-corruption units to underpin the
integrity of their operations. They
include the department of justice, the
National Prosecuting Service and the
South African Revenue Service. The
anti-corruption unit within the South
African Police Service has, however,
been incorporated into the organised
crime and general detective unit. The
Country Assessment Report on Corruption
believes the move will make the campaign
against corruption in the police more
efficient and "more accountable to the
public". Beyond that the government has
adopted a national programme against
corruption - for which it received a
pledge of support from the United
Nations office on drugs and crime - and
established, in co-operation with the
business community and civil society, a
national anti-corruption forum.
Specialised units serving in the
frontline against corruption include the
Special Investigating Unit and Asset
Forfeiture Unit, under the leadership of
Willie Hofmeyr, a man whose small
stature belies a toughness and tenacity
of purpose that helped him survive the
pressures of detention without trial by
the previous regime. These two units are
underpinned by legislation that empowers
them to seize and recover profits and
assets acquired through criminal
activities. Another powerful
anti-corruption unit is the one that
operates with the Directorate of Special
Operations, (alias the Scorpions) which,
though operating under the immediate
aegis of the National Prosecuting
Authority, falls under the ultimate
authority of the presidential office. It
concentrates on high level cases,
including, as noted earlier, the
allegations against Zuma.
Another sign of the ANC's commitment to
containing corruption is its leading
role in crafting a new anti-corruption
law to replace the Corruption Act of
1992 which, while criminalising the
acceptance of money or gifts by public
officials, does not specifically and
rigorously criminalise the actions of
those who offer bribes in return for
preferential treatment. The Prevention
of Corruption Bill that is being forged
in parliament breaks new ground. To
quote from the Country Assessment Report
already referred to, the bill reinstates
the common law crime of bribery, creates
the presumption of prima facie proof of
the alleged offence to make prosecution
easier and extends the scope of the
legislation to all public officials and
private citizens, including agents who
might act for them.
Further proposed innovations in the bill
are: firstly, a provision that makes it
an offence to bribe or attempt to bride
a foreign official, thus introducing the
notion of extra-territorial
jurisdiction; secondly, a clause that
makes it an offence to be in possession
of property that appears to have been
corruptly acquired and for which the
person concerned cannot give a
satisfactory explanation; and, thirdly,
clauses prescribing tougher penalties of
up to 15 years imprisonment for
officials who solicit or accept
"gratification" (to use the terminology
of the bill) or people who offer or give
"gratification". One of the underlying
assumptions of the bill is that a more
effective anti-corruption law must be
underpinned by harsher penalties.
The lengthy process of drafting,
debating and revising the bill should
not be interpreted as evidence of foot
dragging by the ANC government. Rather
it signals the need to ensure that the
pending law will "pass constitutional
muster" if or when it is challenged in
the Constitutional Court. A successful
challenge in that court will seriously
delay implementation of a more vigorous
anti-corruption campaign, of which the
envisaged new law is a central and
indispensable component.
While recognising that the government
has forged the legal and institutional
instruments to contain corruption, the
DA's Taljaard is sceptical about the
efficacy of the measures. Of the various
anti-corruption units, she observes that
there is an inclination for them to
stand back for one another, with the
result that corrupt practices and
corrupt people escape through lacunae in
the legal and institutional network. She
argues that there is insufficient
co-ordination and, concomitantly,
confusion over which unit is responsible
for what alleged offence. Beyond that,
however, Taljaard questions whether the
ANC has the political will to pursue a
relentless campaign against corruption,
particularly when most of the prime
suspects are upper echelon ANC members.
On the last point she cites the stalled
investigation into allegations that
former defence minister Joe Modise
abused his position to benefit
personally from the multi-billion rand
arms deal. "Did they close the file
because he died?" she asks pointedly.
Her question should be seen in the
context of the findings of the Joint
Investigation into the Strategic Defence
Package that Modise had:
(1) a stake in a company connected to the armaments industry while he was still minister of defence, and,
(2) that the
resultant conflict of interests
between his governmental duties and
his financial ambitions was
"extremely undesirable".
The Joint Investigation
report notes in its concluding chapter
that no impropriety was detected during
the public and forensic phases of the
investigation. That finding, however,
contradicts an earlier statement in the
report that "the matter was not
investigated during the public and
forensic phases of the investigation".
The contradiction cries out for further
investigation.
So, too, as Taljaard has previously
observed, does Modise's role in altering
the assessment criterion for the choice
of fighter and trainee fighter aircraft
during the procurement phase of the arms
deal, thereby tipping the scales in
favour of the eventual winner, Britain's
BAE Systems, and against the initially
preferred bidder, the Italian aircraft
company, Aermacchi. As the British
research consultant Susan Hawley notes
in a recent publication, a month before
the decision was made in favour of BAE
Systems - whose aircraft were twice as
expensive as the Italian counterpart and
were chosen despite a warning that their
operating costs would be "considerably
higher" - the British armaments company
donated R5 million to the ANC's war
veteran's association, of which Modise
was a steering committee member. BAE
Systems has proclaimed that there is
nothing untoward about the donation,
that trustees administer the money and
that it is fully accounted for. That
does not, however, obviate for an
independent investigation, particularly
as BAE Systems is a major beneficiary of
the arms deal. Another cogent reason for
an independent investigation is that it
has still not been satisfactorily
explained where or how Modise obtained
the funds to acquire a substantial
financial stake in companies operating
in the armaments field shortly after -
and even shortly before - he retired as
defence minister in June 1999.
No further investigation has been
conducted into Modise's controversial
role during and immediately after the
arms deal, however. Modise's death in
November 2001 has not changed the
situation: the unresolved questions were
buried with him, to the detriment of the
ANC's reputation as a movement committed
to - in the political jargon of the
times - accountability and transparency,
particularly on the question of
corruption. But the reluctance of the
ANC leadership to hold its notables to
account is not confirmed in the case of
Modise.
Its response to suspicions by
Scandinavian donors that Boesak might
have helped himself to funds given to
his Foundation for Peace and Justice to
help the poor is a case in point: for
months on end the ANC leadership seemed
loath to take these concerns seriously,
even after a reputable Johannesburg
legal firm, mandated to investigate the
matter, reported that it was forced to
the "inescapable conclusion" that Boesak
had "unlawfully appropriated to himself
money to which he was not entitled".
Instead of taking the carefully reasoned
report seriously, the ANC, and Mbeki in
particular, seems to have chosen to
castigate the media for poor or
prejudicial reporting.
Its reluctance to act against Penuell
Maduna when he was minister of mineral
and energy affairs falls into the same
category: he falsely accused the
immediate past Auditor-General of
covering up the theft of R170 million
from the Strategic Oil Fund, ordered an
investigation and, according to the
Public Protector, allowed the
investigation to proceed at huge cost to
taxpayers even after he became aware
that the charge was without foundation.
As Mamphela Ramphele, an independent
thinker and stalwart of the liberation
struggle, notes, when Nkosazana
Dlamini-Zuma was minister of health she
mismanaged millions of rands allocated
to educating the public about HIV/Aids
but was "protected and defended by her
party despite evidence of acting in
contravention of procurement
procedures".
These manifestations of an inclination
by the ruling ANC to protect its
leaders, even when their actions seem
inimical to the common good, impinge
adversely on its declared commitment to
honest and open government and negate,
in part at least, the positive image
conveyed by the laws and institutions it
has established as ramparts against
corruption. So, too, does the
heavy-handed manner in which it asserted
executive power to prevent the Standing
Committee on Public Accounts (Scopa)
from exercising, independently and
impartially, its parliamentary oversight
responsibilities on behalf of taxpayers
during the arms deal saga. A similarly
adverse message is communicated by
Mbeki's quickness to accuse those who
raise critical questions about the
probity of government ministers and
institutions of seeking to perpetuate
negative stereotypes of black people. It
creates the impression that he prefers
ad hominem abuse to rational debate.
Taljaard fears that the ANC, as a former
liberation movement, tends to conflate
itself with the state and thus to place
itself - and its leaders - above
criticism and even, by extension, beyond
accountability. The placing of party
loyalists at the head of institutions
charged with responsibility for
protecting South Africa's constitutional
democracy, including the public
protector's office and the National
Directorate of Public Prosecutions, is
hardly reassuring. It raises the danger
that they might place party interests
above the state or that they may not see
the difference.
Standing back and taking a broad view
offers a political portrait in which
conflicting forces are vying for
supremacy. There is undoubtedly an array
of laws and institutions that offer the
means to excise corruption from
post-apartheid South Africa. As
important, they reflect the will by the
ANC to do so. But they are endangered by
the proclivity of the ANC leadership to
place a greater premium on protecting
its leaders than pursuing the fight
against corruption. Closely linked to
that is its penchant for characterising
its opponents as unreconstructed racists
or, if they are black, as the useful
idiots of the racists. By so doing the
ANC shuts it ears to warnings that it
might do well to heed.
With acknowledgement to Patrick Laurence and Helen Suzman Foundation.