Saturday, May 28, 2022

PUBLIC PROTECTOR IMPEACHMENT IS THE ANC’S WATERLOO MOMENT


            By Paul Ngobeni

 

When the history of the ANC misrule in post-apartheid South Africa is written, the impeachment of the Public Protector will certainly be its Waterloo moment. Daily, there is a new revelation about ANC corruption which has direct damaging consequences in general on the functioning of our state institutions, and in particular on the administration of justice. Sadly, members of the judiciary have been ensnared into collaboration with the supposed New Dawn president Ramaphosa who has used state institutions to destroy his political enemies under the pretext of eradicating corruption and restoring public confidence in government institutions. Empirical evidence outlined here show that members of our judiciary have enabled capture of state institutions by Ramphosa-led faction of the ANC. What has ensued is corruption which decreases public trust in justice and weakens the capacity of judicial systems to guarantee the protection of human rights in general. That corruption has affected the tasks and duties of the judges, prosecutors, lawyers, and other legal professionals has also raised disturbing questions about the forthcoming impeachment of the Public Protector Advocate Mkhwebane.

 

Corruption has a multitude of faces.  While most people equate corruption only with money crimes or bribery, there is political corruption, much more hidden and imprecise but just as insidious. Its broad range of action enables it not only to influence the judicial system, but all the sectors of state administration as well.  As evidenced by the Public Protector’s case, specific judges have been appointed to her impeachment case and have produced scandalous reports which deny the existence of judgments produced by those same judges in other matters. This evolving scandal is like peeling an onion, one layer after another with no end in sight but its full exposure is likely to implode the ANC and expose it for all to see.  Let us examine the evidence carefully.

 

On 21 February 2020, Mazzone, the DA’s Chief Whip, submitted a motion for the impeachment or removal of the Public Protector under Section 194 (1) of the Constitution. She alleged that the Public Protector should be removed from office for misconduct and/or incompetence.  Acting with unseemly alacrity, then National Assembly Speaker Modise determined that the motion was in order and rapidly appointed a so-called independent panel chaired by retired Concourt judge Bess Nkabinde.  The panel’s task was to conduct preliminary assessment to determine whether there is prima facie evidence that the Public Protector is guilty as charged.  The Public Protector was prohibited by the NA rules from appearing in the panel’s proceedings through a legal representative.  Amongst other things, the panel had to determine whether the Public Protector had committed “misconduct” and was “incompetent” because she had relied decided on a 2007 Executive ethics code when she found President Ramaphosa guilty of misleading parliament in the Bosasa CR 17 funding matter.  The panel produced a shockingly erroneous and demonstrably false report which stated that:

The problem with the PP’s report is that she introduced [a foreign] element of “inadvertent” misleading of Parliament into the Executive Ethics Code and then relied on it. In reality the Code only prohibits the deliberate, willful or intentional misleading of Parliament.” Paragraph 209.1 of the Panel Report.

The panel stated further that “regarding the Executive Ethics Code, ..the PP showed a flawed          conceptual grasp of the issues with which she was dealing. Her reasoning was muddled and difficult to understand.” Id. paragraph 209.8.2. 

 

But lurking behind the report was a much bigger scandal which is emblematic of how our pliable judges can be employed to do the dirty job of the President or the executive.  The Panel simply committed a “judicial” fib through its palpably false misreading of the code. On 7 February 2007 President Mbeki introduced significant changes to the Code of ethics.  He published a new Ministerial Handbook: A Handbook  for  Members  of  the  Executive  and  Presiding  officers (7February 2007) which was approved by cabinet. This Handbook was provided to every member of the executive at national and provincial levels and has been in use since 2007, and was in use during the public Protector’s investigation of the Bosasa and CR17 funding matter. See, https://serve.mg.co.za/content/documents/2011/04/13/Ministerial-Handbook-2007.pdf

In fact every Cabinet member and members of the executive Committees of provinces have been inducted on and have used the 2007 Code at least since 2009. The new code widened the prohibition considerably in that a new Section 2.3 of the Executive Ethics Code now expressly states that:  “Members may not: “a. Deliberately or inadvertently mislead the President, or  the Premier or, as the case may be; the legislature.”  Ramaphosa was inducted on the 2007 Code when he became a deputy president of South Africa in 2014.  So the panel’s conclusion that Mkhwebane “invented” her own code or introduced a “foreign element” of “inadvertent misleading” was a bald-faced lie.  But its gets worse.

 

The Chairperson of the panel, Justice Nkabinde was a member of the Concourt justices panel that produced the “Nkandla” judgment. See,EFF v Speaker [2016]ZACC 11. There the Concourt unambiguously stated that “the  President  violated  the  provisions  of  the Executive  Members’  Ethics  Act7 and  the  Executive  Ethics  Code.8These  are  the national legislation and the code of ethics contemplated in section 96(1).” See, Para. 7 of the “Nkandla judgment.”  Specifically, the  Constitutional Court cited “ Chapter 1 of the Ministerial  Handbook:  A Handbook  for  Members  of  the  Executive  and  Presiding  officers(7February 2007) at pages 7-15”. See, footnote #8 of the (Nkandla) judgment.  The Public Protector was indeed correct. Contrary to the Independent Panel’s unfounded and defamatory assertions, the 2007 Code is very explicit – on its own terms it prohibits “willful” and “inadvertent” misleading of the legislature.  But Nkabinde simply disregarded her own judgment and accused Mkhwebane of falsely introducing a “foreign element” in the Code.

 

In the interest of probity and high ethics in public institutions and the judiciary we must ask the following pertinent questions: (1) why did Justice Nkabinde not disclose that she had been on the Concourt’s “Nkandla” judgment panel which relied on exactly the same 2007 code Advocate Mkhwebane relied upon? (2) why did Nkabinde not disclose that she had a conflict of interest in that she ruled as part of a court judgment that the applicable ethics code was the 2007 version but had suddenly changed course and ruled to the contrary when she was appointed to deal with Mkhwebane on the impeachment panel?  (3) Why did Justice Nkabinde not recuse herself when she realized that the panel was dealing with the 2007 code matter which she had ruled on in the Nkandla judgment? (4) Given that the ruling which contained scurrilous and false allegations against Mkhwebane was based on the panel’s erroneous understanding of the facts and the law, what is the current status and impact of the panel’s report? (5) why should Mkhwebane be put through a torturous process of impeachment based on mendacity by a judge? 

 

I am not suggesting that Justice Nkabinde could not have been genuinely mistaken – to err is human. But we must probe further into what strong incentive, inducement or gratification did Ramaphosa offer to force an experienced jurist of Nkabinde’s caliber to author a report endorsing Ramaphosa’s demonstrable lies and distancing itself from a court judgment in which the same Nkabinde was a deciding judge. How can Justice Nkabinde who participated in the Nkandla judgment and used the 2007 Code version now author a report that says that Mkhwebane was ‘incompetent” because she relied on the same Code the Concourt used in the Nkandla judgment?  If the 2007 version is the “wrong” code does that render the entire Nkandla judgment null and void?  Why would a judge so easily change her position and contradict her own judgment to advance the politically motivated agenda of constant ad hominem attacks on a Public Protector who used the same law that the Concourt used in Nkandla? As a corollary, how does judicial flip-flopping and the perception that judges alter their rulings and disregard legal principles depending on the person they are dealing with asiist our democracy? 

 

Undeniable reality is that when Ramaphosa was a Deputy President and Gordhan served in the Zuma Cabinet, they both accepted that the applicable code was the 2007 version which was used by Madonsela and later Mkhwebane.  All that changed when both Ramaphosa and Gordhan were found guilty of misleading parliament – they changed tack and argued that the favorable but superseded 2000 version of the Code must apply to their conduct and not the 2007 version relied upon by the Concourt. This was wicked clever because the 2000 version only proscribes Members of the Executive “willfully” misleading “ the legislature to which they are accountable.” But the 2007 Mbeki version, not Mkhwebane, added the words “may not willfully or inadvertently mislead.”  Under the latter version both Ramaphosa and Gordhan are guilty even if they acted “inadvertently” when they misled Parliament.  It is for that reason that they resorted to using an outdated law to shore up their phony defense and the obsequious judiciary obliged.

 

The sad reality of ANC thuggish behavior is that the Code was “correctly” applied when the courts were sitting in judgment over President Zuma but now the law had to change for Ramaphosa who insists that the 2000 Code of Ethics that President Mbeki had expressly changed should be bought back and applied to him. I take cognizance of former President Mbeki’s stony silence when a debate is raging over the existence of the very 2007 executive Ethics code he introduced. Is that indicative of how ANC politics is driven by anti-Zuma slant and not by fidelity to the constitution? Former president Mbeki knows to a moral certainty that he was the author of and did introduce the 2007 Code.   

Why would a former President with integrity maintain silence when a black woman is being savaged amidst false accusations that she invented her own laws and introduced that same Code of Ethics introduced by Mbeki?

 

Another “jikanelanga” who has thrived in the conspiracy of silence against Advocate Mkhwebane is the former Public Protector Madonsela who is known for her antipathy towards Mkhwebane. For her entire tenure as a Public Protector Madonsela relied on the amended 2007 Code in conducting investigations, making findings, writing reports and issuing remedial orders.  A few examples will suffice.

 

Madonsela relied on the 2007 version of the Code in writing several adverse reports against Ministers such as the late Minister Shiceka. See,   (https://www.gov.za/sites/default/files/gcis_document/201409/shicekareport0.pdf . Madonsela also used the 2007 Code to investigate and make findings against the Premier of the Western Cape. See, http://uscdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/40634_draft_final_report_version_3.pdf  ). In addition, during the investigation into the Nkandla matter, Madonsela relied on the 7 February 2007 version of the Code.  Before the apex Court Madonsela relied on the 2007 Code and that Court affirmed that the 2007 Code was indeed correct.

 

In July 2021, the same Concourt that relied on the 2007 Code when dealing with Zuma suddenly changed its jurisprudence when dealing with Ramaphosa. See, Public Protector and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (CCT 62/20) [2021] ZACC 19.   It claimed that amongst other things that the Public Protector seriously misconstrued the Cod (para.57); that “she thought that the Code prohibited members of the Executive from furnishing any and every piece of incorrect information, regardless of their state of mind and the objective they wished to achieve (para 58.) The Concourt went further and manufacctuured a demonstrable judicial lie when it proclaimed:

“But what is more concerning with the report is that the Public Protector changed the wording of the Code by adding “deliberate and inadvertent misleading of the Legislature”. (Paragraph 59).

 

The Concourt elaborated on its flagrantly false accusation by stating:

The Public Protector then changed the wording of the Code to include “deliberate and inadvertent misleading” so as to match with the facts.  Having effected the change in the Code, the Public Protector proceeded to conclude that the President had violated the Code.  It is unacceptable that the Public Protector did what no law had authorised her to do. Paragraph 60…It was the wrong approach adopted by the Public Protector here which led her astray.  Instead of evaluating the President’s conduct against paragraph 2.3(a) of the Code, she measured it against a standard she had created…Para.61.

The Concourt concluded: “In this regard, the Public Protector’s finding on the misleading of Parliament issue is fatally flawed due to a material error of law.” Mkhwebane is now being lynched based on judicial mendacity –it is simply unprecedented in any jurisprudence for a group of nine justices to collectively lie about a clear piece of legislation and then accuse a public official of having changed or invented her own law.

 

One of South Africa’s best legal minds who taught in law schools in the UK and New Zealand, Advocate Richard Sizani, who is a former public service commission chairperson has confirmed that the 2007 Code had been used in government from its date of adoption to Ramaphosa’s administration. He confirms that the 2007 handbook which contains the Code was accepted as an official guiding document on government policy for more than a decade. The phrase “members may not deliberately or inadvertently mislead the president, the premier or, as the case may be, the legislature” is contained in the handbook. It is judicial lie to state that Mkhwebane invented the language explicitly stated in the Handbook or that she made up her own version. But that is what Ramaphosa’s ANC in cahoots with the DA is willing to use as a basis for Mkhwebane’s impeachment.

 

The discerning masses of our people will poignantly observe that the ANC which failed to amend the constitution to effect a land restitution program is now willing to work with the white-dominated DA to impeach Mkhwebane on the basis of false evidence concocted in collaboration with our judiciary. The masses are aware that parties such as the EFF, UDM, ATM, PAC etc. which champion the human rights of all South Africans have expressed support for the besieged Public Protector and have refused to join in the lynch party. It would indeed be a monumental spectacle to see long-serving ANC ministers and parliamentarians voting with the DA to impeach Mkhwebane on the allegations that she “changed” or “invented” a Code of Ethics they have used since 2007.  Can such hypocrites who target a black woman on the basis of a lie be trusted with transformation of our society or should the masses give the other parties a chance to govern?  To rehash evidence of judicial capture by the Ramphosa faction of the ANC is simply to paint the lily. It is undeniable and needs no further elaboration.

 

Sunday, May 22, 2022

THE HYSTERIA OVER YENGENI JSC COMPLAINT AGAINST CHIEF JUSTICE ZONDO

 

                             By Paul M. Ngobeni

Tony Yengeni, a liberation struggle hero, former Umkhonto We Sizwe commander and political prisoner has filed a meritorious judicial misconduct complaint against Chief Justice Zondo. Predictably, the swift Pavlovian response from pseudo-journalists and other demagogues has been personal attacks and denunciation of Yengeni  whom they labeled a “convicted fraudster.”  The merits of Yengeni’s complaint is immaterial to these bigoted folks who have invested so much in Zondo’s Commission that they cannot face the naked reality that Zondo has made costly errors of judgment that may render the Commission’s work unlawful and forever tarnish the image of the judiciary and his own. Let us examine the merits of the complaint.

 

The crux of Yengeni’s complaint is the plethora of constitutional issues involved when a serving judge, a Deputy Chief Justice for that matter, is appointed to serve on a Commission of Inquiry appointed by the executive. Yengeni correctly relies on the Code of Judicial Conduct, Articles 12(1)(b) which says: “A judge must not, unless it is necessary for the discharge of judicial office, become involved in any political controversy or activity”; and article 12(1)(d) which says: “A judge must not use or lend the prestige of the judicial office to advance the private interests of the judge or others.”  

 

We know that Zondo has an obsession with unnecessary political controversy and that alone exposes his jurisprudential defects and bias. A case in point was Zondo’s recent savage attack on Minister Sisulu for her article she penned in her capacity as ANC head of transformation committee. Sisulu wrote that “The most dangerous African today is the mentally colonised African.” Further she wrote. “When you put them in leadership positions or as interpreters of the law, they are worse than your oppressor. They have no African or pan-African inspired ideological grounding. Some are confused by foreign belief systems.” She then used the term “house negroes” before going on to say: “When it comes to crucial economic issues and property matters, the same African cosies up with their elitist colleagues to sing from the same hymn book, spouting the Roman Dutch law of property. “But where is the indigenous law? It has been reduced to a footnote in your law schools.”These ideas were clearly intended to provoke and stimulate further political debates to accelerate transformation in our post-apartheid society.

 

Instead of engaging with these serious jurisprudential questions Zondo accused Minister Sisulu of grievously insulting the judiciary with her article.  Zondo claimed: “This is not just criticism, it is an insult…In this case I certainly think Ms Sisulu has crossed a line.” Zondo said he had consulted with colleagues in the judiciary before addressing the matter. He implied that the judiciary endorsed his public forays. Unfortunately, Zondo’s colleagues in the judiciary grossly misled him and set him up to embarrass himself and expose his ignorance to the entire universe.

 

An astute jurist would have instinctively recognized that Sisulu’s article constitutes "rhetorical hyperbole," which is "'extravagant exaggeration [that is] employed for rhetorical effect.'" Backes v. Misko, 486 S.W.3d 7, 26 (Tex. App. 2015).  As the United States Supreme Court has held, a published statement that is "pointed, exaggerated, and heavily laden with emotional rhetoric and moral outrage" cannot constitute a defamatory statement. See Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 497 U.S. 1, 32 (1990).  Nor can it be penalized as “insulting” or “offensive” as Zondo has done. The U.S. Supreme Court has employed rhetorical hyperbole to hold that heated and emotional rhetoric receives free-speech protection rather than be deemed to be defamatory.   For example, the Supreme Court ruled in Letters Carrier v. Austin 418 U.S. 264 (1974) that labor members did not defame nonunion members when they referred to them as “scabs” or “traitors” in a company newsletter. The Court stated, "Such words were obviously used here in a loose, figurative sense to demonstrate the union's strong disagreement with the view of those workers who oppose unionization. Expression of such an opinion, even in the most pejorative terms, is protected under federal labor law."' The Court, comparing the statements of the union to the accusation of "blackmail" made in another case, noted the "definition of a 'scab' is merely rhetorical hyperbole, a lusty and imaginative expression of the contempt felt by union members towards those who refuse to join”. Id. at 286.

 

Further, the Sisulu case can be better understood by reference to decisions on the right to free expression in which the right to use “political hyperbole” was recognized. In Watts v United States, 394 U.S. at 706, the defendant, at a public rally at which he was expressing his opposition to the military draft, said, “If they ever make me carry a rifle, the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J. (the President).”  He was convicted of violating a federal statute that prohibited “any threat to take the life of or to inflict bodily harm upon the President of the United States.” The U.S Supreme Court reversed the conviction on the basis that the defendant had not made a “true ‘threat,”’ but had indulged in mere “political hyperbole” 394 U.S. at 708.  In short, the defendant did not literally state his intentions to kill the President!

 

Likewise, in NAACP v Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 U.S. 886 white merchants in Claiborne County, Mississippi, sued the NAACP to recover losses caused by a boycott by black citizens of their businesses, and to enjoin future boycott activity. During the course of the boycott, NAACP Field Secretary Charles Evers had told an audience of “black people that any ‘uncle toms’ who broke the boycott would ‘have their necks broken’ by their own people.” 458 U.S. at 900, n.29.  The Court acknowledged that this language “might have been understood as inviting an unlawful form of discipline or, at least, as intending to create a fear of violence ....”.Id. Yet, no violence had followed directly from Evers’ speeches, and the Court found that Evers’ “emotionally charged rhetoric ... did not transcend the bounds of protected speech ... An advocate must be free to stimulate his audience with spontaneous and emotional appeals for unity and action in a common cause. When such appeals do not incite lawless action, they must be regarded as protected speech.” 458 U.S. at 928. Both the Watts and Clairborne illustrate the fact that the right to free expression protects expressive acts that amount to political hyperbole, even if they contain violent imagery. These expressive acts must be tolerated, unless they constitute a real and imminent threat of, or incitement to, violence.  That is a far cry from the views expressed in a newspaper opinion piece about an untransformed judiciary.

 

A disturbing part of Zondo’s foray into political debate with Sisulu is readily apparent when we analyze the Concourt’s own case-law on the matter of free political speech.  This raises the question of whether Zondo attacked Sisulu in a genuine belief that she was wrong or whether he did so because she was rumored to be a potential ANC presidential candidate who would be Ramaphosa’s rival. I poignantly raise this issue because the Constitutional Court has made clear that the articles similar to Sisulu’s were protected. It has repeatedly acknowledged the importance of the fundamental right of freedom of speech. Thus, it has been stated that freedom of expression “lies at the heart of democracy”. South African National Defence Union v Minister of Defence and others 1999(4) SA 469 (CC) at para 7.  Also, in the case of Print Media South Africa and another v Minister of Home Affairs and other 2012 (6) SA 443 (CC), the Constitutional Court held that freedom of expression “…promotes and protects the moral agency of individuals. Whether expression lies at the right’s core or margins, be it of renown or notoriety, however essential or inconsequential it may be to democracy, the right cognises an elemental truth that it is human to communicate, and to that fact the law’s support is owed.” Id. at para 53.

 

Further, in the Islamic Unity Convention v The Independent Broadcasting Authority and others [2002] ZACC 3; 2002 (4) SA 294 (CC) case, the Constitutional Court also endorsed the freedom to express offensive, shocking or disturbing speech on the basis of case authority from the European Court of Human Rights:

“South Africa is not alone in its recognition of the right to freedom of expression and its importance to a democratic society… In Handyside v The United Kingdom, the European Court of Human Rights pointed out that this approach to the right to freedom of expression is -

 

‘applicable not only to “information” or “ideas” that are favourably received or regarded as inoffensive or as a matter of indifference, but also to those that offend, shock or disturb….Such are the demands of that pluralism, tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is no ‘democratic society’.” Id. at para. 28.

 

It is irrelevant that Zondo considered the article offensive, shocking or disturbing. Zondo and his faceless judicial colleagues who advised him to tackle Sisulu are duty-bound to understand and to properly interpret the provisions of the ANC constitution and the freedom of speech provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa. They had an obligation to be mindful of that which was said in both Argus Printing and Publishing Co Ltd v IFP [1992] ZASCA 63; 1992 (3) SA 579 (A) and also in Mangope v Asmal and Another 1997 (4) SA 277 (T) about political debates.

 

In Argus supra, the court was concerned with whether or not a political body could sue for defamation. The court commented that “political debate should be unfettered. People should not be restrained in their political utterances by the fear of being subjected to claims for defamation”. “Mere debate on political questions, or expressions of disagreement with an opponent's political views, would clearly not be actionable. Even personal criticisms of a political opponent are not readily regarded as defamatory”. The court affirmed that which was said in an earlier judgment that “courts must not avoid the reality that in South Africa political matters are usually discussed in forthright terms. Strong epithets are used and accusations come readily to the tongue. I think, too, that the public and readers of newspapers that debate political matters are aware of this.” Part of the rationale for the law’s reluctance to regard political utterances as defamatory stems from the “recognition that right-thinking people are not likely to be greatly influenced in their esteem of a politician by derogatory statements made about him by other politicians or political commentators”. Accordingly, the Supreme Court of Appeal endorsed the general approach that “wide latitude” should be allowed in public debate on political matters”.  Zondo and his  judicial colleagues seemed to be completely oblivious of these legal principles and Zondo was hell-bent on abusing his powers to further a factional ANC agenda based on a false legal theory.  Judges are quint-essential public servants and criticism of the judiciary, just like that of any branch of government, cannot readily be characterized as “insulting” or “offensive”.  No right-thinking judge would believe that South Africa still has a slave plantation where there are “house negroes” and “field negroes” of the American days of slavery.  Zondo gratuitously insinuated himself in a purely ANC party political debate and then used his judicial status to condemn Ramaphosa’s potential rival.

 

In the subsequent Mangope supra decision, the court said that, although even politicians can be defamed, they should not be “overhasty to complain about slatings against them unless it is really serious”. A distinction should be drawn between an attack against the “dignity and reputation of a politician” and “an attack upon his political views, policies and conduct”. In respect of an attack on the latter, the court would be slower to come to the assistance of a politician. The same applies to performance of judiciary functions.  It is unfathomable that Zondo and his unnamed judicial colleagues carved out exceptions for themselves as judges to shiled themselves against criticism on the form of political hyperbole.

 

To assess whether a statement is "rhetorical hyperbole," any right-thinking judge must look to the statement as a whole in light of the surrounding circumstances and based upon how a person of ordinary intelligence would perceive it.  As the court stated in Argus supra, “political debate should be unfettered. People should not be restrained in their political utterances by the fear of being subjected to claims for defamation”. “Mere debate on political questions, or expressions of disagreement with an opponent's political views, would clearly not be actionable. Even personal criticisms of a political opponent are not readily regarded as defamatory”.  Lamentably, Zondo either clearly shows himself to be woefully out of touch with both the legal principles and political reality of public debates on policy or constitutional matters or he has chosen the route of political grand-standing at the expense of the judiciary. 

 

The Argus court affirmed that “in South Africa political matters are usually discussed in forthright terms. Strong epithets are used and accusations come readily to the tongue. I think, too, that the public and readers of newspapers that debate political matters are aware of this.” Part of the rationale for the law’s reluctance to regard political utterances as defamatory stems from the “recognition that right-thinking people are not likely to be greatly influenced in their esteem of a politician by derogatory statements made about him by other politicians or political commentators”. As Lewis JA remarked in the South African Supreme Court of Appeal in Mthembi-Mahanyele v Mail & Guardian Ltd and Another: “Freedom of expression in political discourse is necessary to hold members of Government accountable to the public. And some latitude must be allowed in order to allow robust and frank comment in the interest of keeping members of society informed about what Government does. Errors of fact should be tolerated, provided that statements are published justifiably and reasonably.” The judiciary also needs to be held accountable through proper  and robust political discourse.

 

This begs the question – why did Zondo not know all this case-law from his own court? Zondo indulged in serious over-reaching when he purports to act as a super-czar of what is acceptable or “insulting” in a public political debate. Zondo simply ascended an anti-Sisulu bandwagon and went about systematically attacking her without digesting or taking cognizance of the relevant legal principles as developed by our very own judiciary. He brought the judiciary into disrepute. In light of the law deliberately ignored by Zondo, Yengeni should have added Zondo’s anti-Sisulu outburst as another ground for judicial misconduct. But there is more!

 

Arguably, Zondo flouted the admonition that a judge should refrain from political activity or political controversy when he waded into the political debate and convened a press conference and issued public statements at the time when he was moonlighting as an acting Chief Justice and acting as an “instrument of the executive.”  It is dubious that his attacks on Sisulu can be characterized as necessary for the “discharge of judicial office” since he was unconstitutionally still performing an executive task as Commission chair and at the same time purported to be acting as Chief Justice.  It is an open secret that Sisulu will face off against Ramaphosa when she enters the ring to contest the position of ANC president in the forthcoming December 2022 elective conference.  Zondo’s savage attacks on her and the accompanying praises on Ramaphosa as a messiah of both the ANC and the state cannot be seen in isolation.  Part of the prohibition in the judicial code means that judges must not make speeches for a political organization or candidate, or publicly endorse or oppose a candidate for public office.  

 

The endorsement of Ramaphosa is purely based on Zondo’s gut feeling and not based on empirical evidence. His assumption that state capture has ended and that it ended when Ramaphosa was elected ANC president is simply preposterous. Yengeni justifiably concludes that CJ Zondo has “either deliberately or negligently launched himself in the middle of the political contestation for leadership of the ruling African National Congress, and advanced or potentially advanced the private (and political) interests of the current President of the African National Congress. “He has done so by pronouncing in his report that the election of the current President of the African National Congress at the December 2017 national conference saved South Africa from ‘further damage’.”

 

The Bangalore Principles to which our own judiciary subscribes are explicit - a judge shall ensure that his or her conduct, both in and out of court, maintains and enhances the confidence of the public, the legal profession and litigants in the impartiality of the judge and of the judiciary. (Bangalore Principle 2.2). Further, a  judge,  like  any  other  citizen,  is  entitled  to  freedom  of  expression,  belief,  association  and assembly, but in exercising such rights, a judge shall always conduct himself or herself in such a   manner   as   to   preserve   the   dignity   of   the   judicial   office   and   the   impartiality   and independence of the judiciary. (Bangalore Principle 4.6). Obviously, the perception  of  impartiality  is  measured  by  the  standard  of  a  reasonable  observer.  The perception that a judge is not impartial may arise in a number of ways, for instance through a perceived conflict of interest, the judge’s behaviour on the bench or his or her associations and activities outside the court.(Commentary, paragraph 52). Additionally, a judge must avoid all activity that suggests that his or her decision may be influenced by external factors such as a personal relationship with a party or interest in the outcome of a case. (Commentary, paragraph 55).   In this context, everything—from a judge’s associations or business interests, to remarks that he or she may consider  to  be  nothing  more  than  harmless  banter—may diminish the judge’s perceived impartiality. (Commentary, paragraph 65). 

 

The ugly picture that emerges when one examines Zondo’s involvement with Ramaphosa and the Commission must not escape scrutiny by all.

He failed to draw and observe the line. It is crucially important for judges to be seen by the public as exhibiting that detached, unbiased, unprejudiced, impartial, open-minded and even-handed approach which is the hallmark of a judge.  If  a  judge  enters  the  political  arena  and  participates  in  public  debates—either  by expressing opinions on controversial subjects, entering into disputes with public figures in the community, or  publicly  criticizing  the  Government—he  or she  will  not  be  seen  to  be  acting judicially when presiding as a judge in court.

 

Instead of vilifying Yengeni we must shine the spotlight on Zondo’s own injudicious acts and lack of discernment. The first misstep by Judge Zondo was his acceptance of the appointment to serve in the State Capture Commission as a sitting Deputy Chief Justice. In doing so, Zondo appears to have been ignorant of the basic characteristics of Commissions.  As stated by Scott Prasser who stated:,

 

a … commission is not a “judicial inquiry”. There is no such thing in our system of government. There are courts separated from executive government and presided over by judges and magistrates to hear cases based on law. By contrast, … commissions, although often carried out by current or former judges, are not courts of law. They are appointed by executive government, report to executive government, and are instruments of executive government. Executive government decides their terms of reference, timeframes and resources. So a royal commission is not about making judgments, but about clarifying the facts and making recommendations on a broad range of issues. [Scott Prasser, “Royal commission must not be turned into a witch-hunt” The Australian (13 November 2012).]

 

This alone should have made it clear to Zondo that the appointment to head the State Capture Commission had the potential to compromise and soil his judicial role. For three years he served in a role where he was appointed by the President, he reported to executive and was “instrument of executive government.” To paraphrase Prasser, the Executive government decided Zondo’s terms of reference, timeframes and resources.  It is puzzling that an astute jurist like Zondo appeared oblivious to the fact that he would be enmeshed in political controversy as “an instrument” of the executive.  That was bound to raise questions about his political bias. 

 

In addition, Zondo knowingly assumed the risk of political attacks when he accepted appointment as Chairperson of a Commission, a role that kept him as an “instrument” of the executive for almost four years.  In the Canadian case of Gagliano v Canada (Commission of Inquiry into the Sponsorship Program and Advertising Activities), 2011 FCA 217 at paras 20-22, 336 DLR (4th) 216, Létourneau JA of the Federal Court of Appeal spelled out the self-imposed dilemma as follows:

        

There is a world of difference in terms of significant impacts between a commission of inquiry and an adjudicative tribunal....

By definition, Commissions of Inquiry investigate rather than adjudicate. It must not be forgotten that the commissioners chairing such commissions do not have evidence establishing the facts, causes and circumstances of the events being investigated. It is the very role of commissioners to seek out that evidence and then analyze it.

Good investigators, just like fine bloodhounds, are driven by suspicion which they seek to confirm so that the file may be closed, or to dispel so that the search can pursue other tracks.

 

In the court of public opinion at least, the distinction between legally enforceable findings of criminal or civil and criminal liability and mere factual findings of misconduct –so central to the jurisprudence delimiting the powers of public Commissions inquiries may be illusory. Zondo had a duty to avoid publicly criticizing persons he did not like using terms that suggested they were guilty of criminal wrongdoing or acts of maladministration. Equally, he had a duty not to effusively praise Ramaphosa who rewarded him with an undeserved promotion contrary to the JSC recommendation.

 

Zondo let his guard down and ignored the doctrine of incompatibility which is intended to ensure that when judges do assume extra-judicial duties, their conduct will not impugn the integrity and proper operation of the judiciary as a whole.  In the case of In Grollo v. Palmer, [1995] 184 CLR 348 (HCA) Australia’s High Court found that incompatibility arises under the following three circumstances: (1) where a judge assumes “so permanent and complete” a commitment to a non-judicial function that his or her judicial duties are disrupted, (2) where the nature of the non-judicial function is such that the judge’s ability to perform his or her judicial duties with the requisite integrity is impaired, and (3) where the non-judicial function is “of such a nature that public confidence in the integrity of the judiciary as an institution or in the capacity of the individual Judge to perform his or her judicial functions with integrity is diminished.” Id. at 365.  A finding of incompatibility must ensue where any discretion purportedly possessed by the judge is to be exercised on political grounds—that is, on grounds that are not confined by factors expressly or impliedly  prescribed by law.  

 

It should have been intuitively obvious to Zondo that he was being asked to perform a Sangoma’s function and not a judicial task. Our Republic has no statute defining the contours or setting forth a working definition of “state capture.” Not surprisingly Zondo has not once attempted to define “State Capture” in his voluminous reports.  He adopted a populist understanding of that concept and proceeded to exercise his discretion on political grounds.  He cannot now shed crocodile tears and decry the criticism by citizens who clearly see through his political leanings.  In any event, he knowingly became steeped in the cauldron of politics when he commingled his judicial duties with those of a mere tool or “instrument of the executive” as a Commissioner.  It is highly disconcerting that Zondo signed the Fourth Volume of the “State Capture Report” and identifies himself in his capacity as “Chief Justice” of South Africa.  

 

Judge Zondo was aware of the full scope of the incompatibility doctrine which was further refined in Wilson v. Minister for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs, [1996] 189 CLR 1 (HCA) [Wilson]. That case concerned the appointment of a Federal Court judge under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act 1994 to investigate the potential impact of a bridge development on Aboriginal heritage interests, and to provide an advisory report to the responsible minister. The majority held that the nomination and appointment of Justice Mathews was not effective as the performance of the reporting function would be inconsistent with the separation of powers required by the Constitution. Kirby J stated:

it is not compatible with the holding of federal judicial office in Australia for such an office holder to become involved as “part of the criminal investigative process,” closely engaged in work that may be characterised as an adjunct to the investigatory and prosecutory functions. Such activities could “sap and undermine” both the reality and the appearance of the independence of the judicature which is made up of the courts constituted by individual judges. They could impermissibly merge the judiciary and the

other branches of government. The constitutional prohibition is expressed so that the executive may not borrow a federal judge to cloak actions proper to its own functions with the “neutral colours of judicial action.”

 

The Court characterized the appointee’s extra-judicial function as a “condition precedent” to the exercise of political discretion by the Minister.  Justice Zondo was fully aware that appointment to the State Capture Commission inevitably would involve him not only in political controversy but very deeply as “part of the criminal investigative process”. He was destined to be closely engaged in work that may be characterised as an adjunct to the investigatory and prosecutory functions. As evidenced by the four years of exclusive Commission work and expenditure of almost a billion rands, the State Capture activities did “sap and undermine” both the reality and the appearance of the independence of the judicature. Zondo performed no judicial work, he wrote not a single judgment and spent his entire time consorting with the executive.

 

As if to underscore the deep insinuation of Zondo into the NPA prosecution, Ramaphosa published in a gazette notice an amendment dated 28 July 2020 President which effectively allows South Africa’s law enforcement agencies to have access to information gathered by the state capture commission of inquiry, making it easier to build cases against implicated individuals. This came almost two years after the Commission commenced its work and after Zondo had consistently made clear that even implicated persons did not enjoy unfettered rights to cross-examine their accusers or to give evidence.  In spite of it all Zondo still feels emboldened to speculate that the election of Ramaphosa in 2017 saved the country’s treasury from further looting by persons he denied even the most basic due process rights during the inquiry. Viewed with this prism, Mr. Yengeni has ample justification for perceiving Zondo’s pontification as nothing more than naked political gamesmanship.  But there is more.

 

Zondo deserves no sympathy as he knowingly ignored court judgments and the admonition of the very Constitutional Court he now leads. In South African Association of Personal Injury Lawyers v Heath and Others (CCT27/00) [2000] ZACC 22; 2001 (1) SA 883; 2001 (1) BCLR 77 (28 November 2000), the Concourt quoted with approval the above cited Australian precedent which held that

 

44.“it is not compatible with the holding of federal judicial office in Australia for such an office holder to become involved as ‘part of the criminal investigative process’, closely engaged in work that may be characterised as an adjunct to the investigatory and prosecutory functions. Such activities could ‘sap and undermine’ both the reality and the appearance of the independence of the judicature which is made up of the courts constituted by individual judges. They could impermissibly merge the judiciary and the other branches of government. The constitutional prohibition is expressed so that the executive may not borrow a federal judge to cloak actions proper to its own functions with the ‘neutral colours of judicial action’.

 

The Court considered the fact that the functions that the head of the SIU (Judge Heath) was required to perform were far removed from “the central mission of the judiciary.” They “are determined by the President, who formulates and can amend the allegations to be investigated. If regard is had to all the circumstances including the intrusive quality of the investigations that are carried out by the SIU, the inextricable link between the SIU as investigator and the SIU as litigator on behalf of the state, and the indefinite nature of the appointment which precludes the head of the unit from performing his judicial functions, the first respondent's position as head of the SIU is in my view incompatible with his judicial office and contrary to the separation of powers required by our Constitution.”  As I lamented above, President Ramaphosa has already amended the scope of the State Capture investigation and has involved Judge Zondo in the unenviable position of being part of the criminal investigative process in which witnesses testify before the Commission only to find themselves arrested by the Hawks a short while after giving such testimony.

 

  Judge Zondo should also have heeded the following admonition of the Concourt in Heath:

Under our Constitution, the judiciary has a sensitive and crucial role to play in controlling the exercise of power and upholding the bill of rights. It is important that the judiciary be independent and that it be perceived to be independent. If it were to be held that this intrusion of a judge into the executive domain is permissible, the way would be open for judges to be appointed for indefinite terms to other executive posts, or to perform other executive functions, which are not appropriate to the “central mission of the judiciary.” Were this to happen the public may well come to see the judiciary as being functionally associated with the executive and consequently unable to control the executive’s power with the detachment and independence required by the Constitution. This, in turn, would undermine the separation of powers and the independence of the judiciary, crucial for the proper discharge of functions assigned to the judiciary by our Constitution. “ Id. at para. 46.

 

In Zondo’s case, a confluence of factors exacerbated by his career ambitions have severely dented Zondo’s image and called into question his political neutrality. He ignored the constitutional separation of the Judiciary from the other branches of government which is an important principle enshrined in the Constitution.  Despite his dismal performance during the JSC interviews in which he came out dead last, he accepted a favour from Ramaphosa who appointed him ahead of a female candidate who out-performed Zondo in all areas of judicial leadership. He is actually a beneficiary of an unconstitutional, sexist and discriminatory appointment process in which the President expressly rejected a JSC selection process in favour of Zondo who would exonerate him, sing his praises and declare that Ramaphosa was god-sent messiah of the ANC and country.

 

There is a good chance that the entire Commission could be declared unlawful and its findings void. Zondo jettisoned all the principles in the Heath case. That case clearly established the criteria relevant to considering whether or not under our Constitution, it is permissible to assign a non- judicial function to a judge, namely, whether the performance of the function:

·      Is more usual or appropriate to another branch of government.  Under our Constitution, holding the President to account is a function of parliament (legislative branch) and Zuma was required to and did account to Parliament on a variety of matters including the very issues of appointment of members of Cabinet, the Jonas allegations and sundry issues Zondo purported to inquire into.

·      Is subject to executive control or direction. The Constitution requires that a Commission appointed by the executive remain exclusively under the control of the executive but that was flagrantly violated when the appointment of the State Capture Commission was made a shared venture between the judiciary and the executive and the extension of the terms of the Commission have now been taken over by the judiciary.  Zondo’s attempt to further involve the Concourt in coercing witnesses to appear before the State Capture Commission further emphasizes that the lines of demarcation have been irredeemably blurred.

·      Requires the judge to exercise a discretion and make decisions on the grounds of policy rather than law.  Early indications are that terms such as “state capture” were left deliberately vague and are not susceptible to legal definition.  One searches in vain for the criterion Zondo used to decide that Cabinet appointments or dismissal of certain senior public officials were a product of state capture as opposed to discretionary functions of members of the executive including the President.  Even assuming crimes were committed, why is the NPA not suitable for the role assigned to it under Section 179 of the Constitution?

·      Creates a risk of judicial entanglement in matters of political controversy. Once again we are beyond the issue of whether a “risk” was created – Zondo became deeply entangled in political controversy and ANC factional battles. Zondo submitted his report to President Ramaphosa who has ultimate discretion to accept or reject its findings.  The Commission’s star witness, Agrizzi, has painted a good picture of allegations of impropriety in the controversial CR17 campaign funding scandal. The judiciary has sealed the records of the funders so we are in no position to know the identity of the funders and to determine from public records whether these funders have been rewarded with government tenders. While the initial findings of the Public Protector – which claim that Ramaphosa purposefully misled parliament in connection to a dubious R500 000 donation from infamous Bosasa boss, Gavin Watson – it has also emerged that opposition EFF member of parliament, Tebogo Mokwele, had admitted to receiving funds from Ramaphosa’s CR17 campaign. Mokwele, who initially claimed that she had been paid a total of R40 000 – intended to assist with a bereavement in the family – later resigned in an effort to ‘save the integrity of the EFF’. Mokwele said that while she didn’t have a personal relationship with Ramaphosa, she wasn’t surprised when he sent her money as a show of sympathy after the passing of a family member. Judge President Dunstan Mlambo and judges Elias Matojane and Raylene Keightley found Mkhwebane did not have the requisite jurisdiction to investigate donations to a private person's political campaign. They also found that he had no obligation to declare the donations, even if he was deputy president at the time, as he had derived no personal benefit from the donations.

 

So from the very inception, Zondo’s appointment while still actively serving as a Deputy Chief Justice is a gross violation of the principles laid down by the Concourt in Heath. The Constitution vests in the President the exclusive powers to appoint a Commission but that power was usurped and the judiciary became enmeshed in performing the exclusive executive function.  Furthermore, Zondo overlooked the principle that judges must be, and be seen to be, separate from and independent of the legislature and executive. The blurring of this line has already occurred albeit through the intervention of President Ramaphosa who appeared and  testified before Zondo.  Records of donations from Ramaphosa’s own funders and bank records remain sealed by court order while Zondo is furiously investigating a faction of the ANC not congenial to Ramaphosa.

 

I must point out that Apartheid judges were solicitous of the rights of persons required to appear before a commission of Inquiry.   They ruled that a commission that pays scant regard to the rules of natural justice is not entitled to have its decisions respected by our courts or the executive. But that appears to be missing from Zondo’s jurisprudential approach.

 

It is undeniable that crucial to the discharge of this judicial duty is that the courts be and be seen to be independent. But that has now been brought into question by the fact that Zondo resumed his judicial duties while the tasks he was performing for the executive were unfinished and his reports are still being written for the executive as we speak.  This act of moonlighting clearly negates the principle that he can be seen to be independent while acting at the behest of the executive.

 

The Chief Justice Ngcobo ruling by the Concourt reminds us that Zondo’s case is a more gross violation of the separation of powers and undermines judicial independence.  In Ngcobo’s case, the mere extension of the term of his service by the executive was deemed to be unconstitutional because of the risk that the public could perceive that as executive favour to the Chief Justice.  Zondo was worse - he was actively pursuing his candidacy for Chief Justice of the country and the man considering his candidacy is  Ramaphosa who was implicated in corruption by testimony of some witnesses. Not only is Zondo managing CR damage control exercise but he creates an impression or an appearance that he may exonerate Ramaphosa in a quid pro quo where he will get the Chief Justice position.  Further, indications are that the report is heavily slanted against Zuma-aligned persons and is helpful to Ramaphosa in his battle for political survival in the ANC.  The appointment as Chief Justice was just the reward Zondo wanted.

 

One word of advise to Zondo is warranted. He must not rest on his laurels as the every-rising storm clouds of controversy will soon engulf him and pre-occupy him in litigation for the rest of his judicial career. A New Zealand case reported at Re Erebus Royal Commission [1983] NZLR 662 (Privy Council); and Re Erebus Royal Commission (No 2) [1981] 1 NZLR 618, gives us a picture of what awaits Zondo. It perfectly highlights the unsavory consequences of a sitting judge’s involvement in Commissions where they are required to inquire into politically and socially sensitive cases. 

 

There a highly respected jurist Peter Mahon was appointed to chair a one man Commission and to report on the 1979 Erebus air crash, which killed 257 people. Mahon’s conclusions were that Air New Zealand’s inadequate safety processes led directly to the crash. He accused the airline of covering up its mistakes with ‘an orchestrated litany of lies’. This controversial finding was fiercely and successfully challenged by Air New Zealand in the courts on the ground of denial of natural justice. The Appeal court found that Mahon had breached natural justice by not allowing those accused to respond to his allegations, and that he had acted beyond his jurisdiction in his findings of perjury. The court also cancelled Mahon’s order of costs against Air New Zealand, but did not challenge his findings relating to the cause of the accident. Justices Woodhouse and Duncan McMullin delivered particularly critical judgments. As reported in Mahon, Peter Thomas – Dictionary of New Zealand Biography, https://teara.govt.nz/en/biographies/6m7/mahon-peter-thomas : 

 

“Mahon resigned as a judge, citing loss of confidence from his peers. He appealed the court’s decision to the Privy Council, an expensive, time-consuming, stressful and ultimately unsuccessful process. Mahon’s finding regarding the cause of the accident remained but, in his view, his reputation had been impugned. The saga divided the New Zealand legal profession and played out in full public view.”

 

That was an object lesson that venturing into non-judicial Commissions work can come at a heavy reputational and institutional cost. Will Zondo have the fortitude and resign as Chief Justice if his findings are reviewed and set aside? Will he stomach the loss of confidence from his peers?


Thursday, May 12, 2022

Has Ramaphosa Abused the NPA and the Zondo Commission for Political Ends?

                          By Paul M. Ngobeni

 

President Ramaphosa announced many months before he even received the Zondo Commission report that he would enthusiastically implement the Commission’s findings. Of course, at the time of his announcement Ramaphosa knew that he had Judge Zondo by the proverbial balls – Zondo desperately wanted to ascend to the soon to be vacant position of Chief Justice at all costs and Ramphosa could make his dream come true subject to certain conditions.  Zondo had to exonerate Ramaphosa in his report even if some prominent ANC officials were sacrificed or thrown under the bus. For good measure, Zondo also unquestionably crossed the line of judicial ethics by wading into a tussle with Minister Lindiwe Sisulu over her newspaper opinion piece she published about a captured or untransformed judiciary.  Zondo simply sought to assist Ramaphosa against Sisulu, his strongest rival for the ANC presidency, by condemning the latter for her political writings and public engagement.

 

Politically astute South Africans are painfully aware that Ramaphosa has a track record of manipulating and misusing the findings and reports of Commissions against his political enemies to further his own political agenda.  A perfect case in point was the “Arms Deal” Commission report by retired judges Willie Seriti and Thekiso Hendrick Musi which exonerated former President Zuma. The Seriti commission, appointed by former president Jacob Zuma in 2011, thoroughly investigated the government’s controversial purchase of weaponry including corvettes, submarines, light utility helicopters and other light fighter aircraft during the Mbeki years. 

 

Some disgruntled white activists blasted the commission as a whitewash after finding no evidence of corruption against President Zuma in the controversial multibillion-rand procurement package. These critics brought a review application in the North Gauteng High Court to set aside the findings of the Seriti Commission of Inquiry for its alleged failure to admit, interrogate and pursue evidence related to corruption allegations in 1999 arms deal.  But Ramaphosa devised a stunning political solution to effect a negative outcome for Zuma and to ensure that the narrative of Zuma’s alleged corruption was perpetuated and used to Ramaphosa’s own political benefit.  This is how he accomplished the satanic feat.

 

First, Gauteng Judge President Dunstan Mlambo who is reported to be Ramaphosa’s henchman adopted an unprecedented manoeuvre - he took over the matter and invited two other senior judges (judge presidents from other divisions) Dennis Davis and Monica Leeuw, to sit with him on the matter.  The jurists then proceeded to invalidate Judge Seriti’s findings that there was no evidence of corruption in the arms deal.  See, Corruption Watch and Another v Arms Procurement Commission and Others (81368/2016) [2019] ZAGPPHC 351; [2019] 4 All SA 53 (GP); 2019 (10) BCLR 1218 (GP); 2020 (2) SA 165 (GP); 2020 (2) SACR 315 (GP) (21 August 2019).  Significantly, the Court observed that:

 

[17] It is important at this stage to make the following observations: this review was not opposed by any of the respondents nor any party for that matter. In particular, President Ramaphosa (fifth respondent) chose to abide the decision of this Court. The fifth respondent appointed senior counsel to present argument, not in opposition of the relief sought by the applicants, but merely 'to assist this Court to arrive at a correct decision'. Significantly, neither the second nor the third respondents, the two members of the Commission, opposed the relief sought nor did they seek to admit any affidavit into evidence that might have sought to gainsay the applicants version. For this reason, this Court is bound to accept the facts set out in the founding affidavit and to base its application of its review powers on these facts.

 

Ramaphosa gerrymandered this outcome by instructing the Miisters of Justice and Public Enterprises not to oppose the application.  In short, Ramaphosa embarked on a farcical process and charade to ensure that there was no opposition to the review of the Seriti Commission and he did all that “merely 'to assist this Court to arrive at a correct decision'. As the publication “Legalbrief” noted, President Cyril Ramaphosa did not oppose this application by Corruption Watch and Right2Know, even though the Presidency had accepted the report in its entirety in 2015.  Further, the publication stated that “former President Jacob Zuma, probably has most to lose, and will almost certainly be the first to feel the full impact of the ruling.” The judgment effectively “means he can no longer count on the commission's findings – as he has done up to now – to argue against the myriad arms deal corruption-related counts he faces.”

 

Faced with an unopposed case, Mlambo JP, who was also being eyed for elevation to the Constitutional Court came out guns blazing. The panel said it was “inexplicable” for the inquiry to have ignored essential information before finding there was no evidence of corruption, improper influence, or fraud in the arms deal. The judgment emphasised that without opposition, the court was bound to accept the facts of the applicants and rule only on how the commission came to its findings.The court found “it is clear that the commission failed to enquire fully and comprehensively into the issues which it was required to investigate on the basis of its terms of reference”. It criticized the commission’s  failure to introduce the record of the criminal case against Schabir Shaik, convicted of soliciting bribes from arms company Thomson-CSF, amongst others. It failed to interrogate evidence from arms acquisition head Chippy Shaik and businessman Fana Hlongwane, both of whom are linked to allegations of corruption in evidence from other submissions at the inquiry. The court also found that the inquiry’s refusal to begin the diplomatic process of accessing information from foreign governments “seriously hobbled its investigation”. Mlambo concluded that “where the uncontested evidence reveals so manifest a set of errors of law, a clear failure to test evidence of key witnesses, a refusal to take account of documentary evidence which contained the most serious allegations which were relevant to its inquiry, the principle of legality dictates only one conclusion, that the findings of such a commission must be set aside.” 

 

You may vociferously argue against President Zuma's persistent insistence that judicial  and state institutions have been used to persecute him and other political opponents of Ramaphosa for all you like. But the evidence is just too glaring to ignore. 

 

Ramaphosa also pulled another stunt which is particularly revealing of his political calculations. Before he even saw the report, he assured the public the recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture’s report will be implemented once he receives it.
 

This begs the question - can a law-abiding, rational, honest and duty-conscious President commit himself to accepting and implementing the report of a commission before it is even drafted and published or before he has even seen its contents?[1]  How would he know in advance whether the report is riddled with “manifest a set of errors of law, a clear failure to test evidence of key witnesses, a refusal to take account of documentary evidence which contained the most serious allegations which were relevant to its inquiry” before such drafting and publication of the report? Is such conduct consistent with Section 84 of the Constitution and the principle of legality, and if not does that not render the President’s acceptance of the Zondo report and implementation a nullity? We can leave that to the lawyers of those falsely implicated in the Zondo report. But that is not all.

 

After the Commission was established Ramaphosa took another insidious step to weaponize the Commission as a political tool to be used selectively against his political enemies. Following loud criticism of the NPA for its alleged failure to prosecute high profile state capture cases, Ramaphosa amended the Commission’s regulations to allow the Zondo Commission to be used as a Trojan horse for the unwary.  In November 2019, NDPP Shamila Batohi said while there was good cooperation with the inquiry chaired by DCJ Zondo, accessing information was difficult.  She stated: “The Zondo commission cannot share [information] with us unless it has been made public or if the chairperson has otherwise authorised the release of information, and obviously there’s an unwillingness to do that because there’s much to be gained from people coming forward and giving evidence. We are in dialogue on how to manage challenges on both sides of the fence”.

 

In response to the importuning of the NPA Ramaphosa published in a gazette notice of 28 July 2020 an amendment which effectively allows South Africa’s law enforcement agencies to have access to information gathered by the state capture commission of inquiry, making it easier to build cases against implicated individuals. The gazette notice introduces sub-regulation 5 in regulation 11 which reads, “Sub-regulation (1) (2) and (3) shall not apply to the sharing of information, records or documents with any state law enforcement agency.” This raises very serious questions about whether Ramaphosa has effectively forced DCJ Zondo to operate as an appendage to the NPA’s criminal prosecution and investigations which appears to be unlawful and unconstitutional. 

 

The pivotal question is whether changing the rules more than two years after the Zondo Commission had commenced its investigations posed a threat to the fairness of the process, unfairly prejudiced the rights of implicated persons and threatens to undermine the legitimacy of the Zondo Commission itself.  Persons had already given and completed evidence under the rules as they existed and implicated persons were under the impression that the investigators and members employed by the Commission would operate professionally and not labour under a conflict of interest.  That changed as the SIU has now used the very information given to the Zondo Commission to arrest persons implicated in corruption and other offences. This disturbing meddling by President Ramaphosa in the work of the State Capture Commission has also raised the specter that the Zondo Commission is hopelessly compromised and is transformed into an instrument to fight factional battles within the ANC.  It would be interesting to see how Ramaphosa uses his political clout to influence the NPA’s prosecution of his hitherto untouchable allies such as Mantashe, Thabang Makwetla, Zizi Kodwa and a slew of others.  The constitutionality of rules compelling witnesses to appear before a Commission set by the executive, coercing them to testify about certain matters and then using that compelled testimony to build criminal cases against them will be seriously litigated in the coming months and years.

 

In the process, the NPA’s recent public pronouncements have caused it to lose whatever little credibility it had remaining. On 10 May 2022 the National Director of Public Prosecutions Shamila Batohi announced before the Portfolio Committee on Justice and Correctional Services that the NPA's Investigating Directorate (ID) intends to prosecute nine "seminal" corruption cases related to state capture within six months.[2] Why in the next six months? Because the ANC watershed elective conference is due to be held in December 2022 and the prosecutions of individuals deemed a political threat to Ramaphosa must be calibrated to assist the Ramaphosa’s re-election bid. Batohi said the nine ones prioritised were "seminal cases that will talk to the heart of state capture". Batohi naively said: “The reality is that, right now, our response to the findings and recommendations of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into State Capture is what will really be defining for the NPA and South Africa.” I consider Batohi’s view to be naïve in the extreme for several reasons.

 

It is accepted almost universally that that Commissions are not courts of law and evidence adduced during a commission’s inquiry is not automatically admissible in civil or criminal proceedings. In New Zealand the judiciary has long made it pellucid that commissions of inquiries are not courts of law, nor administrative tribunals. See, for example, Peters v Davison [1999] 2 NZLR 164, 181 (CA). Such Commissions do not have the power of determination, and their recommendations and findings bind no one.  They can be ignored or rejected by the executive willy-nilly or at least subject to the legality principle.

 

The Davison Court cited In Re the Royal Commission to Inquire into and Report upon State Services in New Zealand [1962] NZLR 96 at p 109 where North J said:

 

''A Commission of Inquiry is certainly not a Court of law. . . . Nor is a Commission of Inquiry to be likened to an administrative tribunal entrusted with the duty of deciding questions between parties. There is nothing approaching a lis , a Commission has no general power of adjudication, it determines nobody's rights, its report is binding on no one.''

 

The Davison court also made the following observation:

“In opposition are basic characteristics of a commission of inquiry. Its report is merely an expression of its opinion. A commission of inquiry is not to be likened to a Court of law nor to an administrative tribunal entrusted with the duty of deciding questions between parties; there is nothing approaching a lis and the commission has no general power of adjudication (North J in Re the Royal Commission to Inquire into and Report upon State Services in New Zealand at p 109). It follows that the reports of commissions of inquiry have no immediate legal effect. Because the reports of commissions of inquiry are, in the end, only expressions of opinion, "[i]n themselves they do not alter the legal rights of the persons to whom they refer"

 

 

The Court, in another New Zealand case, Re Erebus Royal Commission (No 2) [1981] 1 NZLR 618, made important observations as follows:

''This is not an appeal. Parties to hearings by Commissions of Inquiry have no rights of appeal against the reports. The reason is partly that the reports are, in a sense, inevitably inconclusive. Findings made by Commissioners are in the end only expressions of opinion. They would not even be admissible in evidence in legal proceedings as to the cause of a disaster. In themselves they do not alter the legal rights of the persons to whom they refer. Nevertheless they may greatly influence public and Government opinion and have a devastating effect on personal reputations; and in our judgment these are the major reasons why in appropriate proceedings the Courts must be ready if necessary, in relation to Commissions of Inquiry just as to other public bodies and officials, to ensure that they keep within the limits of their lawful powers and comply with any applicable rules of natural justice.''[3]

 

Canadian courts have also accepted the well-established principle that a Commission of Inquiry may not draw conclusions, or make recommendations regarding the civil or criminal responsibility of any person or organization. They are generally prohibited from making any findings of criminal or civil responsibility, and no such finding may be inferred from any of a Commissioner’s remarks. Such a prohibition is necessary because a commission may admit evidence not given under oath, and the ordinary rules of evidence which provide protection against such matters as hearsay do not apply to public inquiries.  

 

Justice Cory of the Canadian Supreme Court stated in Canada (Attorney General) v. Canada (Commission of lnquiry on the Blood System) (1997), 151 D.L.R. (4th) 1, the following about the history, nature and role of inquiry commissions in that country:

 

29       Commissions of inquiry have a long history in Canada, and have become a significant and useful part of our tradition. They have frequently played a key role in the investigation of tragedies and made a great many helpful recommendations aimed at rectifying dangerous situations.

...

34       A commission of inquiry is neither a criminal trial nor a civil action for the determination of liability. It cannot establish either criminal culpability or civil responsibility for damages. Rather, an inquiry is an investigation into an issue, event or series of events. The findings of a commissioner relating to that investigation are simply findings of fact and statements of opinion reached by the commissioner at the end of the inquiry. They are unconnected to normal legal criteria. They are based upon and flow from a procedure which is not bound by the evidentiary or procedural rules of a courtroom. There are no legal consequences attached to the determinations of a commissioner. They are not enforceable and do not bind courts considering the same subject matter. ... Thus, although the findings of a commissioner may affect public opinion, they cannot have either penal or civil consequences. To put it another way, even if a commissioner’s findings could possibly be seen as determinations of responsibility by members of the public, they are not and cannot be findings of civil or criminal responsibility.

 

 

Very interesting insights are also contained in the judgments of the High Court and in the Supreme Court of Ireland in the leading case of Goodman International and Lawrence Goodman v. The Honourable Mr. Justice Liam Hamilton, Ireland and the Attorney General [1992] 2 IR 542.  This decision is now the foundation, in Irish law, of the constitutionality of the Tribunal of Inquiry (Commissions), as known in Irish law.   In Goodman, the former Chief Justice said at p.590:

 

“With regard to the suggestion that the findings of the Tribunal if not an impermissible administration of justice by a body other than a court, is a usurpation of the activities of courts in cases where either civil cases are pending or may be instituted, it seems to me that again this submission arises from a total misunderstanding of the function of the Tribunal. A finding by this Tribunal, either of the truth or of the falsity of any particular allegation which may be the subject matter of existing or potential litigation, forms no part of the material which a court which has to decide that litigation could rely upon. It cannot either be used as a weapon of attack or defence by a litigant who in relation to the same matter is disputing with another party rights arising from some allegation of breach of contract or illegal conduct or malpractice. I am, therefore, satisfied that the submission under Article 34 must fail”. (Emphasis added)

 

 Commissions of inquiry all seem to have several things in common - such tribunals operate “in vacuo” and are of “sterile of legal effect” in that their reports are simply opinions and “devoid of legal consequences”. 

 

In this context, the NPA and other Ramaphosa puppets need to come to the realization that they are headed for a very bumpy ride and the Zondo Commission’s reports are simply opinions and “devoid of legal consequences”.  The said report is not automatically admissible in court and cannot be used as a weapon or a shield in the hands of NPA at any stage in a judicial forum. The Courts must regard the Zondo report as “devoid of legal consequences” or “sterile of legal effect”.  Even though the Commission was headed by a Deputy Chief Justice, its report cannot be elevated improperly to assume the status of a court judgment. That would be purely wrong and inconsistent with Section 165 of the Constitution which states unequivocally that judicial authority lies in the courts.  A matter of fact requiring to be established before a court must be established by admissible evidence which is open to cross-examination and contradiction, and is given publicly before the Court. It is not normally an admissible form of proof to produce a statement by a third party whether a policeman, a government minister or a Commission of Inquiry and to claim that that has evidential effect, prima facie or otherwise. An exception to this arises, of course, where there is an issue which, by virtue of a decision of a court of competent jurisdiction, is res judicata between the parties; but such a decision of a court will itself have been reached on admissible evidence duly adduced in a hearing which observes all the parties’ procedural rights. 

 

The Zondo Commission and its processes are woefully inadequate and the members of the public who have been misled to believe that Zondo has adjudged certain persons guilty will be sorely disappointed. In short, Ramaphosa has effectively forced DCJ Zondo to operate as an appendage to the NPA’s criminal prosecution and investigations which appears to be unlawful and unconstitutional. Lawyers will have a field day litigating such matters and exposing just how corrupt and manipulative Ramaphosa has been. 

 

 



[1] See, https://www.citizen.co.za/news/south-africa/state-capture/2637293/state-capture-report-ramaphosa-2-october-2021/ (President Cyril Ramaphosa assured the public the recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture’s report will be implemented once he receives it.)

[3] In Erebus (No 2) at p 653, Cooke, Richardson and Somers JJ.