The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) has emerged as a stronger
organisation following the Hefer Commission, national director of
public prosecutions Bulelani Ngcuka said yesterday.
"We faced one of the toughest public tests any organisation can
face. This does not happen with many institutions, especially not
with organs of state. However, there should not be any doubt in our
minds that as an organisation we emerged a lot stronger after the
Hefer Commission".
Ngcuka was speaking at the NPA's national conference in
Johannesburg.
He said the Hefer Commission had united the personnel of the
NPA.
"We emerged stronger also because the people of South Africa
witnessed first hand what the allegations were about. The result
was that public confidence in the NPA and law enforcement in
general increased".
He warned that this confidence came at a price: "The price is that
our obligations towards the public we are serving have now
increased. People are now going to expect more from... the NPA,
which is a positive challenge for us".
Ngcuka said the commission had also "exposed and tested the
vulnerability of the relationships between the law enforcement
agencies".
The NPA now had to find ways to rebuild those relationships.
The organisation's operations had also been tested in the process,
he said.
This was an apparent reference to former transport minister Mac
Maharaj allegation that someone in NPA's investigating arm, the
Scorpions, had leaked information to the media claiming his wife,
Zarina, was being investigated for tax invasion.
Ngcuka said: "Organisationally we need to re-examine our policies,
procedures and processes. If we find any weaknesses, we need to
tighten those up".
Ngcuka said the organisation was still trying to come to terms with
the impact of the commission.
"We should determine, without delay, the extent of whatever
collateral damage the whole Hefer episode might have caused to the
reputation and the capacity of the NPA to meet the demands of its
mandate".
Ngcuka said he chose to see the Hefer Commission as a positive
opportunity to start afresh.
"I am not saying that Hefer was not a painful experience nor that
it did not do damage. It was painful and it has caused
damage".
Ngcuka said in the past the NPA had focused on technical
competence.
"Our experience during the Hefer Commission and our initial
assessment of the impact of the commission on our organisation,
clearly shows that the time has come to shift gears.
In light of this "we need an attitude change, a leadership
change".
By this Ngcuka did not mean he was resigning: "I am not quitting. I
am here to stay," he told delegates.
He meant the NPA was to "embark on a new and exciting leadership
initiative called the 'fearless executive'".
This was a special programme drawn up for the NPA, which would be
introduced soon.
The Hefer Commission was established to investigate allegations
that Ngcuka may have been an apartheid spy. – Sapa. |