Arms commission to respond later |
Publication |
polity.org.za |
Date | 2013-01-22 |
Reporter |
Sapa |
Web Link | www.polity.org.za |
The Seriti commission probing the arms
deal will respond later this week to
allegations contained in a resignation
letter by a senior investigator.
"The commission will send a comprehensive
response on or before Wednesday January 23,"
spokesperson William Baloyi said on
Monday.
Norman Moabi, a lawyer and former
acting judge from Pretoria, alleged in the
letter, which was leaked to Beeld newspaper,
that the commission was not being
transparent and was concealing an
alternative or "second agenda".
Moabi wrote in the letter, addressed to
Judge Willie Seriti, that he was
resigning because of interference and
because he had lost faith in the
commission's work.
According to Moabi, Seriti ruled the
commission with an iron fist and facts were
manipulated or withheld from commissioners.
Contributions from commissioners who did not
pursue the "second agenda" were frequently
ignored.
Hearings were expected to start in March.
In October 2011, President Jacob Zuma
announced that Supreme Court of Appeal Judge
Seriti would chair the three-man commission
of inquiry, assisted by judges Hendrick
Musi and Francis Legodi.
Initially, Judge Willem van der Merwe
– the same judge who acquitted Zuma on a
rape charge – was appointed to help Seriti,
alongside Legodi.
However, in December 2011, the presidency
said Van der Merwe had indicated he would
not be able to serve on the commission, for
personal reasons.
Zuma then appointed Free State High Court
Judge President Musi to replace Van der
Merwe.
In May,
commission secretary Mvuseni Ngubane
was found dead on the back seat of his car
in Pinetown, KwaZulu-Natal. Police said a
suicide note was found near the body, but
that parts of it were illegible because of
blood stains. It was thus not clear why he
committed suicide.*1
As secretary of the commission he
would have been responsible for managing its
budget and ensuring it had administrative
support.
The multi-million rand arms deal has dogged
South Africa's politics since it was signed
in 1999, after then Pan Africanist Congress
MP Patricia de Lille raised
allegations of corruption in Parliament.
Zuma was himself charged with corruption
after his financial adviser Schabir Shaik,
who had a tender to supply part of the
requirements, was found to have facilitated
a bribe for him from a French arms company.
The charges against Zuma were later dropped.
With acknowledgement to polity.org.za
*1
He had no reason to do so.
This is what happens when the subject
survives their credibility destruction and
the East German brake specialist's solution
is not fast enough.
Such is life and death in Azania.