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South African News Updates |
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7 April 2009 Today the Durban High Court withdrew
the indictment against me following the decision of
the National Prosecuting Authority not to prosecute.
This marks the end of a long and painful period. The
investigation has brought untold pressure on the
entire Zuma family especially my children and
relatives.
We have been sustained throughout this by the
unwavering support of comrades, friends and scores of
well wishers nationally and internationally.
We thank all of them for believing in my innocence, my
assertions of a political conspiracy and of being a
victim of a systematic abuse of power.
I do not regard myself as being above the law and I
believe that no public representative should be beyond
scrutiny. That is why throughout the eight-year
period, I did not use my position to interfere with
the due process of the law.
I have always been ready to co-operate with the NPA
and have presented myself in courts whenever needed.
My quarrel with the NPA was on the methods and the
motives of the investigation. The probe was supported
by a vicious media campaign designed to find me guilty
in the court of public opinion.
In addition to routine media leaks, the infamous off
the record briefing by the then National Director of
Public Prosecutions Bulelani Ngcuka contravened the
fundamental principle that individuals are innocent
until or unless found guilty.
It is in this briefing where he showed his real
motives and said he wants to try me in the court of
public opinion and was asking the editors present to
help him. This was the beginning of the abuse of
power.
The actions of the NPA, which fuelled my view that
there was more to the investigation than pure legal
matters included the following amongst others:
a) The decision by Bulelani Ngcuka not to prosecute in
2003 saying the case was not winnable in court, but
choosing to announce this publicly in order to leave a
cloud of guilt, further confirmed what he had said in
the off the record briefing. There was a clear agenda
so that I should remain guilty forever.
There never was a case against me. We have now
discovered that Ngcuka continued to manipulate and
abuse the investigation process long after he resigned
as head of the NPA. The agenda was clearly to improve
the chances of his preferred candidate for leadership
of the ANC, assisted by the head of the Directorate of
Special Operations, Leonard McCarthy.
b) The subsequent decisions to prosecute by Vusi
Pikoli and Mokotedi Mpshe. No reasons have ever been
given as to why the decision of Ngcuka was reversed.
We are pleased that it is now finally clear why these
decisions were taken. The reasons were political and
manipulative.
c) I was alarmed by the failure by the then Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Affairs and that of the
Head of the NPA to co-operate with the Public
Protector in his investigations arising out of my
complaint in 2003, that my rights had been violated by
the NPA.
My assertion was confirmed by the Public Protector,
but his report was subjected to ridicule by Bulelani
Ngcuka and Penuell Maduna, and its recommendations
were never acted upon.
Nobody defended the Public Protector. We will need to
look into how we avoid this in future, as our Chapter
9 Constitutional institutions cannot be effective if
they are not protected from abuse.
We were yet again shocked by the initiation and
involvement of the NPA in the procurement of the
Browse Mole document.
The document accuses me of a conspiracy which was a
threat to "the sovereignty and integrity of the South
African State".
It also made very serious unfounded allegations about
the Angolan President His Excellency Eduardo Dos
Santos and Libyan leader His Excellency Muammar
Qaddafi.
We were also suspicious of the excessive use of
monetary resources to drive the investigation both
locally and abroad. Also alarming was the political
nature of the meetings held by the NPA to discuss the
ANC's resolutions taken at its policy conference
regarding its future and initiatives to counter such.
We were also startled by the fact that in 2005, the
NPA instituted charges first, and then later raided my
properties, former offices and those of my lawyers, an
indication that they charged first and looked for
evidence later. This was a sign of desperation and I
had to seek relief from the courts to protect my
rights.
Most importantly, we were concerned about the failure
of Government to respond decisively to a series of
recommendations by Parliament. We have always said
that we believe our democratic institutions including
Parliament are strong and sound, we still believe this
to be the case.
However, something clearly needs to be done to make
them more effective in their oversight role, to
correct abuses and to protect human rights as
enshrined in the Constitution.
Also, we need to ensure that none of the institutions
we create become so powerful that neither Parliament,
the Executive nor the Judiciary can address their
excesses and abuse of power and protect the public.
The issue of the Browse Mole report was a classic case
of dirty tricks by the DSO.
Parliament's Joint Standing Committee on Intelligence
concluded that the Scorpions were involved in several
illegal activities including intelligence gathering
without a legal mandate.
The Committee made several recommendations which
should have made analysts, media and monitoring groups
realise that something was seriously wrong at the NPA.
These included amongst others the following:
- That the executive authority take appropriate
action against the head of the DSO, Mr McCarthy and
all the officials who were involved in the
production of the Browse Mole Report;
- That Government must conduct a comprehensive
review of the DSO, giving urgent attention to the
manner in which the DSO is currently operating.
All said
and done, let me emphasise that my conscience is
clear. I have not committed any crime against the
State or the people of South Africa.
I had no difficulty with responding to the charges as
I knew they were baseless. I sought legal remedies in
the courts simply because I felt my rights were being
violated for reasons that appeared very suspicious.
And I have clearly been vindicated.
WAY FORWARD
The conclusion of this divisive and painful episode
provides lessons for us in many ways. The
parliamentary oversight role needs to be strengthened.
When Parliament or any of our Chapter 9 institutions
recommend certain actions to protect individuals whose
rights are being violated, it is a travesty of justice
for that to be totally ignored by the Executive.
In the task we have set ourselves to transform our
criminal justice system; we have to promote and
reinforce the independence of our law enforcement
agencies and the judiciary.
We are noticing a worrying new trend of political
parties that want to interfere with the work of our
law enforcement agencies in a desperate bid to win
votes for the coming election. They are playing a
mischievous game. The NPA needs to be allowed a period
of healing and refocusing.
We must clearly strive for a public service in which
officials serve the people and not individuals with
ulterior motives no matter how powerful they are.
The NPA decision and reasons given also reaffirmed
portions of the Nicholson judgement without any shadow
of doubt. The NPA itself admitted that there was
manipulation and abuse of power
It must be emphasised that this debacle has confirmed
that our democracy is strong and our people are very
mature politically.
Over an eight-year period, our country proved that
disagreements can be managed legally and politically
and this matter did not spark off violence despite
generating intense emotions. There can be no doubt
that peace and stability are a certainty at all times
in our country, even when we have intense political
disagreements.
We also need to develop vigilance and inculcate a
culture of promoting adherence to human rights
regardless of who the victim is. We have found that
some media institutions and certain think tanks became
willing and active participants in the conspiracy,
simply because they disliked the individual being
targeted.
That is regrettable as the fourth estate should
actually assist us to expose abuses of power.
Our country has gone through a very painful and
divisive period, and it is a time for healing and
unity.
I would not wish for any South African to go through
what I went through over the last eight years.
Retribution will not take us anywhere. Now is the time
for us to focus on improving people's lives.
We want to put this episode behind us and focus on our
priorities; education, health, rural development, the
fight against crime and creating decent jobs despite
the global economic meltdown.
Most importantly, all citizens must remain vigilant
against any abuse of power. We can prevent it if we
work together.
Let me take this opportunity to thank the ANC and the
Alliance, my legal team for their sterling work,
religious and traditional leaders and ordinary South
Africans who supported me throughout this ordeal. They
all demonstrated that they were and are defenders and
guarantors of our democracy.
They have been vindicated by the NPA statement
that:"In the light of the above, I have come to the
difficult conclusion that it is neither possible nor
desirable for the NPA to continue with the prosecution
of Mr Zuma''.
I thank you. |