Treating Zuma with kid gloves has failed. What now for South Africa’s corruption commission?
By Cathleen Powell
Judge Raymond Zondo, chair of the commission investigating grand corruption in South Africa, has been too polite with former state president Zuma.
South Africans have witnessed a strong exchange between the
State Capture Commission investigating corruption, the Constitutional Court and former president Jacob Zuma. Zuma, on whose watch the plunder allegedly took place, refused to comply with a summons from the commission. The commission then applied to the court for a declaratory order that he was obliged by law to cooperate.
While many have welcomed the commission’s sharp reaction, we need to ask whether it has gone far enough.
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The Act gives commissions of enquiry the powers of courts of law, including the power to issue summons. This means the State Capture Commission had the power to summon Zuma to appear before it. It did so in this case as a last resort, as he had repeatedly avoided appearing and answering its questions.
Zuma was required, by law, to comply with such a summons and was not allowed to refuse to answer questions from the commission. If he wants to refuse to answer a question to protect himself from self-incrimination, he has to
make a detailed case for refusing to answer each specific question.
The Constitutional Court described Zuma’s lack of cooperation with the commission as “reprehensible” and ordered him to pay the commission’s legal costs – a highly unusual measure in constitutional litigation against the state.
State Capture Commission
The allegations that the state has been wrestled out of the hands of its real owners, the people of South Africa, is (sic) of paramount importance and are therefore deserving of finality and certainty.
Kid gloves and delaying tactics
The Constitutional Court
judgment was not surprising to people who have followed the commission’s two-year effort to get Zuma to testify.
The court sets out these efforts in its judgment.
But what was surprising was that the court had almost as much criticism for the commission as it had for Zuma. Importantly, it overturns Zuma’s claim of
victimhood and unfair targeting.
The court found that, far from treating Zuma worse than the other witnesses, the commission had handled him with kid gloves. In doing so, it wasted valuable time and state resources, and imperilled a vital public investigation.
For example, it
“invited” Zuma to give evidence instead of issuing a summons to him. It negotiated with his lawyers when he first walked out of the proceedings
in July 2019 . And it went through an unnecessary process of a hearing on
whether to issue summons when it could simply have issued the summons.
By giving Zuma the chance to respond to this hearing, the commission opened the door to further
delaying tactics on his part.
Zuma’s perverse argument
The judgment gives the public a comprehensive finding on how Zuma has frustrated the work of the commission, why that is unacceptable, and why his claims of a witch hunt hold no water.
As for Zuma himself, it is clear that he has
learnt nothing. His
response to the judgment ignores all the carefully substantiated arguments that the court provides. He merely reiterates that the system is stacked against him.
The only change is that he now includes the Constitutional Court among his alleged persecutors. The fact that his evidence is central to the commission’s work because he ran the engine room of all the alleged corruption before the commission (
paragraphs 69-70 of the judgment) is taken as proof of the unfair campaign against him.
Perversely, the fact that the judgment details his legal obligations is taken as proof that the law is aimed exclusively at him, rather than applying equally to all witnesses. This, once again, ignores the court’s point that Zuma cannot be granted better treatment than any other witness before the commission.
Time for decisive action
But the most important message from the judgment is for the commission itself, and its chair, Judge Raymond Zondo. And that is that it doesn’t matter what Zuma thinks.
The enquiry cannot be run as an effort to persuade either Zuma or his followers that he is being fairly treated.
The apex court has made it clear that the commission has an essential constitutional duty to fulfil and that, if it does not use the powers given to it by law to carry out this duty, it is failing South Africa. Whatever shortcomings its final report may have, it would be important to know that the commission did its best.
The commission’s
response to Zuma’s defiance emphasises that he is not above the law. It shows a growing willingness to use its coercive powers. But laying criminal charges is merely one of its options.
As the commission
enjoys the powers of a High Court, it can also imprison a person who refuses to testify, for up to eight days at a time, without a criminal conviction. That might still not bring Zuma to answer the questions put to him. But politeness will clearly not do so either.
Even an appeal to the highest court in the land has failed to win Zuma’s cooperation. It has, however, handed the commission the clearest statement yet of its duties and the tools it has to fulfil them.
The ball is now in Judge Zondo’s court.
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