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Last Updated: Tuesday, 09 February 2010 18:07:02

Zuma tells Cabinet team to tackle corruption scourge

Published: 2009/11/19 06:25:33 AM
 

Collins Chabane

CAPE TOWN — President Jacob Zuma and his Cabinet have vowed to deal with the “scourge” of corruption in the government in a determined and co-ordinated way to prevent it infesting every nook and cranny of society.

The Cabinet yesterday delivered on Zuma’s promise in his state of the nation speech to make rooting out corruption one of the priorities of the government.

It will set up an interministerial committee to investigate and make recommendations on “extraordinary steps” to deal with the cancer of corruption in the public service. The decision amounts to an admission by the country’s leaders that existing measures to combat corruption are not working, and that urgent action is needed.

The task of the committee will be to devise a comprehensive anticorruption action plan to ensure all corrupt public servants are brought to book as swiftly as possible.

Government spokesman Themba Maseko said at a post-

Cabinet media briefing yesterday that much more political direction would be given to state law-

enforcement agencies to ensure all incidents of corruption were investigated and strong action was taken.

Public confidence in the government and its agencies has taken a battering in the past few years as a result of the constant stream of media reports on corruption.

On Tuesday, it was revealed that all was not above board in the Department of Correctional Services when it was under former minister Ngconde Balfour .

Allegations emerging from the fraud trial of former national police commissioner Jackie Selebi have fuelled this sense of SA’s fatal slippage.

Transparency International reported this week that SA came 55th this year out of 180 countries measured against its corruption perception index.

“Government is of the view that if it does not provide leadership on this scourge of corruption the chances are that it will continue and permeate each and every aspect of South African life,” Maseko said.

“We want to give confidence to the public and the international community that government will deal decisively with any incident of corruption in all the spheres of government.”

This would be dealt with as a matter of “major priority”.

The Cabinet condemned all involved in corrupt practices, including private sector companies that bribed public officials.

The interministerial committee will be chaired by Monitoring and Evaluation Minister in the Presidency Collins Chabane, and include Public Service and Administration Minister Richard Baloyi , Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan, Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister Sicelo Shiceka and Social Development Minister Edna Molewa as well as ministerial representatives of the security cluster. It will present a report and proposed strategy to the Cabinet lekgotla in January, which will plot the government’s programme of action for the next three years.

Zuma will probably make an announcement on what concrete steps would be taken in his state of the nation speech next year.

If considered necessary, the committee could propose amendments to legislation, the appointment of a permanent anticorruption force or the appointment of an anticorruption commission as recommended by African National Congress treasurer-general Mathews Phosa recently, although these specific suggestions were not discussed by the Cabinet.

The committee will also study the Public Service Commission’s recommendations on corruption as well as other reports and draw lessons from the anticorruption strategies of other countries.

Maseko said the Cabinet was concerned that no action had been taken on the numerous reports on corruption which had emerged from investigations within different government departments.

These reports had given rise to the perception that the incidence of corruption within the government in SA was on the rise.

“SA takes very strong exception to corruption as this is a matter which has a negative impact on the country’s reputation,” Maseko said.

“We want to deal decisively with the perception that corruption is on the rise in the country.”

The Cabinet noted the report presented to Parliament this week by Special Investigating Unit head Willie Hofmeyr on incidents of corruption in the Department of Correctional Services, and expressed its confidence that steps would be taken against all individuals implicated.

Parliament’s correctional services committee reacted with shock to Hofmeyr’s report on how top correctional services officials colluded with a major company in tender rigging.

The officials allegedly accepted millions of rand as “inducements” to ensure contracts worth billions went to a single group of companies.

Hofmeyr mentioned no names, but his report implied that Balfour could be in deep trouble. Balfour had a former director-general, Vernie Petersen, transferred to the Department of Sport in the period when Petersen had begun cracking down on corruption in the department.

The Bosasa group won contracts worth more than R1bn from the department.

ensorl@bdfm.co.za

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By: v3 On: Nov 19 2009 6:46AM
First stop: a certain gentleman with 783 charges of corruption that were corruptly brushed aside. Second: The cronies who covered up. Next: the folk on the parole board who sprung his accomplice Then: the various arms deals, parliamentary scams, Oilgate, Travelgate, etc. Finally: all the other tender irregularities and looting by ANC cronies. THAT should keep them busy until Jesus returns.
By: Princess Zulu On: Nov 19 2009 7:02PM
Why not have Business Against Crime investigate corruption of its sponsors....as a number of white collar criminals have been their supporters..
By: Princess Zulu On: Nov 19 2009 7:47AM
Attack also the corrupt corporates that bribe government people. THat is the source of the money. Make the biggest penalties for the giver as a deterent. We need to nail all corpoates that engage in criminal activities. Cartels are the number 1 problem. they have the money and the influence. Start at cartels and well will start to solve things.
By: Princess Zulu On: Nov 19 2009 8:06AM
Put the DTI Metals team under the microscope. The amount of sector corruption they have been impliacated with is massive, and often proven. Add to that Nimrod Zalk, and invesigate the creation of uncertainty and confusion the he peddles. Both are big problems. Just read the sector history for proof. Get rid of Zalk and Gerhard Nicolous, because Nicolous is definately no the take, or was with both the steal cartel and the scrap cartel.....Time is running our Mr Nicolous
By: henriw On: Nov 19 2009 8:34AM
Ha, ha, ha......start at the top with crook number one and follow through with the famous Durban family. That should cast quite a bit of light on the infamous arms deal. But this is most likely just hot air, posturing to sooth investors and public. Nothing to rock the boat will come of it. People in glass houses cannot afford to throw stones.
By: Princess Zulu On: Nov 19 2009 8:50AM
Start with the steel cartel, the South Africa Iron and Steal Insititute Albertus Nel and Pieter Deitrich, the Reclamation Group, the scrap cartel. AND THEN Gerhard Nicolous DTI metals department head, and Nimrod Zalk DTI policy (why did his policies support known cartels) head, and his conflict of interest as a IDC Director, as there was also conflict of interest bewtween steel mills with IDC funding, and Reclam with IDC funding, in so far as they were err cartels!! Which is now proven
By: Princess Zulu On: Nov 19 2009 8:51AM
NIMROD ZALK - GERHARD NICOLOUS DTI METALS ONE OF OUR LARGEST CRIME AND CORRUPTION AREAS
By: Solomzi100 On: Nov 19 2009 8:53AM
What about fraud? What is the Public Protector doing?
By: Ntinti On: Nov 19 2009 9:15AM
Start with the cronies who ashamely loot and boost about them beibg connected with the number one- This state created entities they support ANC to be close to big chief and buy with Tax payers tabkle in the name of networking deal for state owned- do you need that. Coming to mind is the inability and corruption of IDT and its dictator CEO who is boostful about her connection with Zuma and it is even said maybe her relative works with Msholozi worst the lady is literally looting and with the Controversial/political board and Minister justice will never prevail. People are threatened and dealt and intimidated about Luthuli connection if they dare open their mouth and maybe half of the money is now in Swaziland.
By: geanann On: Nov 19 2009 9:19AM
They are talking anti-corruption, appointing watchdog after watchdog but ministers and NEC members and other high profile ANC leaders remain untouched. See http://letterdash.com/g.annandale/the-daily-nonsense
By: Cliveb On: Nov 19 2009 10:22AM
GOOD IDEA FROM ZUMA, LETS SEE HOW FAR IT GOES...
By: The Ethical Induna On: Nov 19 2009 11:28AM
The arrest of corporate and government corrupt individuals must be supported fully by the people - but we trust government to follow up on our demands.. And here is the problem. The colluding and corrupt CEO's in pty's and Government departments must be followed up - and then driven to the Karoo where rock-breaking can follow at length. Those tasked with overseeing this process - the state - must be the cleanest of all. And here is the problem. The new criminal class parading as BEE et al are trading inside former racist companies willing to sell them a seat - and most are ANC card-carriers. And thence, the challenge. EVery time a tender is issued - the fatcats with blue lights and those sitting where they sat under apartheid continue to abuse us ... the majority. The ANC oversees cartels - a including Eskom, Telkom, and did NOTHING about interconnectivity at MTN Vodacom - because the govenrment SCORED THE TAX out ofthe collusion. Now we're all waking up - but so too the majority and they don't have internet, and they don't respect PRincess, me or you. They don't respect zuma. They respect people who show they've actively involved in calling bad folk to account. The majority doesn't mind if that person is pink or brown - so get ready for the new struggle, Princess.
By: hilly1963 On: Nov 19 2009 11:33AM
This is more hot air, the only thing I would see as 'extraordinary measures' is if they actually prosecute the person involved and not the normal sham prosectution either, the person must sit out his full term. Apart from a bunch of vague threats there is no plan here on how they are going to deal with corruption... dream on..
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