What is cabinet actually doing about serious corruption?

26th September 2022

What is cabinet actually doing about serious corruption?

This question is important because serious corruption is strangling the life out of constitutional democracy under the rule of law in SA. It is imperilling all human rights and especially those rights aimed at poverty alleviation, education and healthcare. Conversion of public money into loot is no way in which to deliver all of the advances offered in the Bill of Rights.

So what is cabinet doing?

Nothing?

Treading water, kicking for touch, playing the ever so long waiting game, protecting the scot-free cadres who share loot with the ANC, and seeking advice that is not needed and ignoring an instruction from the NEC of the ANC on the topic?

Here are some facts, some words from within the cabinet and from those who know:

Accountability Now has been advocating proper compliance with the law on anti-corruption machinery of state, as laid down in the Glenister litigation, since 2012. A draft of suggested enabling legislation and a constitutional amendment to accommodate its proposed Chapter Nine body (and to improve the independence of the NPA) has been available to government since August 2021.

It would appear that only cabinet is out of step with the main opposition parties, the NEC of the ANC and many leading lights in civil society on the need to reform the criminal justice administration to enable it to counter serious corruption effectively and efficiently. The Defend our Democracy campaign endorses the reforms advocated by Accountability Now and has called upon civil society organisations to do likewise.

The rulings of the Constitutional Court in the Glenister litigation have the force of law and bind government to implement them. This implies that a failure to do so entitles the National Assembly to insist on proper implementation. It also allows any public interest litigant aggrieved by the failure to protect human rights and honour international anti-corruption obligations of the state to litigate the matter by drawing the attention of the Constitutional Court to the non-compliance with its rulings in the context of a case in which declaratory, mandatory and supervisory relief is sought.

The tension between the resolution of the NEC of the ANC and the cabinet stance will presumably play out when the ANC holds its elective conference in December 2022. If new brooms are elected to sweep clean, well and good, if not the litigation option becomes irresistible to all right-thinking South Africans.

Written by Paul Hoffman SC, Director, Accountability Now