Press Statement : Judge W L Seriti |
2013-01-23
Press Statement
Mr Norman Moabi, an Attorney who has been in the employ of this Commission
has, in his letter of his resignation signed 7th January 2013, levelled serious
allegations against the Commission. The gist of the allegations, or his
perception, as he puts it, is that the Commission has a second or secret agenda
which is not compatible with its mandate to establish the truth of what
transpired in the Arms Procurement Process, as spelt out in the Commission's
Terms of Reference. The letter has found its way into the various media houses,
triggering a public uproar and demands that the Commission should provide a full
explanation. I note that we are dealing here with perceptions but recognise that
widely publicised perceptions, if left unchallenged, may soon crystallise into
facts in the mind of the public. I have accordingly deemed it necessary to
respond in full as I hereby do. Since the contents of the letter are in the
public domain I feel free to quote therefrom. The following concluding passage
captures the essence of the letter:
"I am unable to be part of this Commission since I have satisfied myself that
the Chairperson seemed to have other ideas and modus operandi to achieve with
the Commission what is not the clear mandate of the enabling government
gazette".
This statement, read with other sentences in the letter, reveals that the target
of criticism is primarily the Chairperson, even though the whole Commission is
tarnished.
In support of the claim of a second agenda Mr Moabi relies on a number of
assertions contained, firstly, in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the letter and,
secondly, in the two quotations appearing under the heading "The penny has
dropped". I deal first with the first part. It is necessary to first outline
briefly the manner in which the Commission has been carrying its work up to the
end of 2012, the modus operandi, to use Mr Moabi's language. This will hopefully
put into perspective the perceptions contained in the first part of the letter.
1. The Commission has in at least two media statements explained the
phases/stages through which its work was being earned out. Most of the work done
so far was in the second phase. This entailed perusing and analysing the massive
documents we received from various bodies and entities that were involved in the
arms acquisition process, including the State Agencies that investigated
acquisition process, for example, the disbanded Directorate of Special
Operations (DSO, commonly known as the Scorpions) and the Directorate for
Priority Crime Investigation. All the documents had to be studied in order to
sift therefrom information that may assist the Commission in its investigations.
In order to streamline the reading and sifting process, the internal legal team
comprising legal practitioners and legal researchers, was divided into three
subteams and each sub-team was allocated a specific area of the terms of
reference or a specific programme to focus on, for example, the acquisition of
the Advanced Light Fighter Aircraft or the Rationale and Offsets. Each sub-team
would make summaries of the information extracted from the documents which is
relevant to the specific programme. Copies of summaries made by each team would
then be made available to the Chairperson and the two other Commissioners as
well as being distributed amongst the sub-teams, so that each sub-team would
have copies of the summaries made by the other sub-teams. In addition. we have a
Document Manager who keeps copies of all the documents received and generated by
the Commission as well as a register thereof. These documents kept by the
document manager are accessible to all the legal professional staff.
It is from the summaries made as above that the briefs to the evidence leaders
were compiled. It is apposite here to refer to a meeting held on 6 November 2012
in the Commission's offices. It was attended by all the Commissioners, all the
members of the internal legal team (including Mr Moabi), the Secretary to the
Commission as well as the Commission's Spokesperson. This was essentially a
planning session in preparation for the public hearings. It is in this meeting
that a document was distributed containing the following:
• list of witnesses to be called for the first phase of the public hearings.
• the witnesses were divided into groups A, B and C based on the nature of the
evidence they were expected to give.
• to each group of witnesses is allocated a team of evidence leaders based on
their perceived areas of expertise.
The bundle prepared for the meeting included a document entitled Preliminary
Strategy which was also circulated and discussed at the meeting. The following
emerges inter alia from this document:
• the names of the legal practitioners assigned to assist in the public
hearings, which included Mr Moabi.
• Advocate Mdumbe is designated to liaise with the evidence leaders for purposes
of briefing them and responding to their enquiries and requests for information.
It was necessary that only one person be allocated this role for purpose of
control and to avoid duplication. Advocate Mdumbe has been designated Head of
Legal Research and has been with the Commission since it commenced its work in
earnest in April 2012. He has built an extensive knowledge of the contents of
the many documents in the Commission's possession and was best placed to provide
the information required by the evidence leaders expeditiously.
If there was any secret agenda surely this document would have revealed it. I am
positive that no such agenda appears in any of the Commission's documents nor
will Mr Moabi produce any.
2. Against the above background I now deal briefly with the specific assertions
made in the letter under consideration.
2.1. The alleged obsession with the control of information by the Chairperson.
Insofar as the Chairperson may have been seen to control the flow of information
this would have been consistent with regulation (12) (1) of the Regulations
governing the proceedings of this Commission.
2.2. When Mr Moabi talks about clandestine preparation of documents and/ briefs.
he is probably referring to the role played by the Head of Research in preparing
briefs for the evidence leaders. Similarly reference to the unknown person who
dictates what information should go into the briefs is again reference to the
role played by Adv Mdumbe. I suspect that Mr Moabi resented the role played by
Adv Mdumbe probably because he considers himself a more experienced practitioner
who should have been given that role. He clearly knows to whom he is referring
but he chooses to mislead by referring to an unknown person or persons.
'2.3. Regarding the complaint that unknown criteria were applied to determine
which attorneys to be paired with which evidence leaders and the complaint that
evidence leaders have instructions to contact only one person in respect of
their queries concerning their briefs, I state that the Chairperson has the
prerogative to decide which evidence leader should deal with which witness or
evidence and to decide which attorneys should be allocated to which evidence
leaders. I do this on the basis of my own assessment of the respective strengths
and weaknesses of the persons concerned and there is nothing sinister about it.
2.4. Regarding the complaint that the professional staff do not have knowledge
of what is contained in the briefs or files given to the evidence leaders, I say
that it is not practical that every one of the professional staff can know
everything that another is doing, and, at any rate, the briefs contain
information that is in the documents to which all professional staff members
have access.
2.5. The allegation that the input of people who do not subscribe to the
non-existent secret agenda is excluded and that such people are deliberately
distracted with irrelevant material is without basis and is patently false.
I think that Mr Moabi is making these false allegations to deliberately tarnish
the image and credibility of the Commission probably because of a personal
grudge he harbours against me based on reasons he has not disclosed. I note that
he has given himself the designation of Senior Investigator and in some
publications he has been referred to as a lead investigator. He held no such
position within the Commission. His appointment letter gives his designation as
attorney/investigator and he has been with the Commission for only four months.
I note that if he had genuine concerns about the modus operandi of the
Commission he should have raised these internally with either the Secretary or
myself and sought clarification. Instead he raises these very serious
allegations for the first time in a letter of resignation.
"The penny has dropped"
I note that Mr Moabi quotes two statements that he suggests confirm the
existence of a secret agenda. He does not, however, say who made the statements
and I do not know if the statements are an accurate reflection of what was
actually said. Media reports indicate that the utterances are attributed to me
and I assume this to be the case. I do not, however, recall making such
utterances nor do I have any idea of the occasion during which the utterances
were made and the context in which they were made.
I have perused the minutes of the meetings of the internal professional staff in
an attempt to verify the position. I have found no such utterances. The minutes
of the 6th November 2012 referred to above do, however, contain references to
hearsay evidence in the context that some of the submissions and/or allegations
that have been in the public domain are based on hearsay evidence and I
emphasised that we still needed to conduct more targeted investigations in order
to see if the allegations have substance. I should mention also that Mr Terry
Crawford Browne in particular has during the course of 2012 inundated this
Commission with emails questioning how the Commission was conducting its
business and he has run a number of press articles along s1milar vem. I may have
expressed the sentiment that he may stop the negative comments once he has given
his evidence. The bottom line is that even if I may have uttered words similar
to those quoted this in itself would not show the existence of any second
agenda. I draw attention to the following factors which strongly militate
against the existence of a secret agenda:
1. I am a Senior Judge and am fully conscious of the oath of office that I took.
I am assisted by two other senior Judges whose integrity is beyond reproach. All
of us know that the success of this Commission depends on our credibility and it
is inconceivable that we would depart from the clear mandate given us by the
President and instead pursue an unknown agenda.
2. The information thus far gathered by the Commission and which will be the
subject of the upcoming first phase of the public hearings was extracted from
documents that were received from various sources referred to above as well as
submissions received from some of the witnesses. The sources know about the
information and the Commission will be totally discredited if any of it were to
be concealed or in any way manipulated.
3. I have already engaged private, independent specialist investigators to probe
aspects of the terms of reference in respect of which our internal legal team do
not have the requisite expertise and it is inconceivable that their reports
would be manipulated to serve a hidden agenda.
4. I have engaged private independent legal practitioners' amongst whom are
Senior Counsel (SC) to lead the witnesses at the public hearings. They will be
in full control of leading evidence as well as interacting with the witnesses
prior to the hearings. The Commission has always interacted with them in an
open, transparent manner and they have no reason to doubt my bona fides instead
they have expressed full confidence in me and my fellow Commissioners. I refer
to the media statement that they have issued.
[signed]
Judge W L Seriti
Chairperson
Date: 22/01/2013
Seriti blithely deems this a response in full.
Maybe South Africans in general have become so thick between the ears that they
actually believe it.
But in reality it is a simple rebuttal of the points made by the antagonist with
very little substance.
Where there is a little substance, this is actually incriminating - the
proverbial consequence of wriggling in quicksand.
Other than that, there is no indication of an investigation antagonist's
extremely serious allegation.
For obvious reason, while there is sand to be had one might as bury one's head
in it.
Thirdly, this braveheart had no inclination to make public his public statement
at a press conference rather than as a press release.
Most South African 4th Estate questions are pretty timid these days, but even
that from the SABC News reporter would have been a hot potato too far.
My alarm bells are a jingling louder than ever.