Thursday, September 26, 2019

Special tribunal to recover state’s stolen billions to start next week

The value of cases ready for adjudication and recovery stands at R14.7 billion, according to a statement from the Ministry of Justice. The era of impunity is behind us,” Justice Minister Ronald Lamola warned as he announced that the special tribunal to recover billions looted from the state will commence its work on October 1.

On Thursday, Lamola gazetted the regulations for the Special Investigation Unit’s Special Tribunal. These regulations came into effect upon their publication in the Government Gazette. The tribunal was established by President Cyril Ramaphosa in February, after an announcement to that effect in his State of the Nation Address.

The tribunal will be fully operational from next Tuesday and the value of cases ready for adjudication and recovery stands at R14.7 billion, according to a statement from the Ministry of Justice.

“Our fight against corruption, fraud and illicit money flows has been given real impetus. This Tribunal is a swift mechanism to claw back every cent that was stolen from the fiscus. The era of impunity is behind us, the establishment of the Tribunal gives effect to the President’s SONA undertaking to have a special tribunal operating within three months,” stated Lamola.

Last month, Lamola stated that the tribunal was delayed as they worked on the regulations to ensure it is “watertight and in order to avoid legal technicalities and loopholes that exposed previous Special Tribunals to litigation”.

Minister Ronald Lamola

“Our previous experience has shown that persons who have stolen and syphoned [sic] public funds through corruption and maladministration would not hesitate against the tribunal in order to frustrate its processes and efforts to recover their ill-gotten gains,” Lamola said in response to a parliamentary question.

Judge Gidfonia Mlindelwa Makhanya will chair the tribunal for three years. He was discharged from active service and will now dedicate his time to the Special Tribunal assisted by seven judges. They are judges Icantharuby Pillay, Johannes Eksteen, Selewe Peter Mothle, Lebogang Modiba, Thina Siwendu, David van Zyl and Sirajudien Desai.

According to the statement from the Ministry of Justice, the tribunal has a statutory mandate to recover public funds siphoned from the fiscus through corruption, fraud and illicit money flows. Special tribunals differ from ordinary civil proceedings which are adversarial in nature. The special tribunal adopts a more flexible and expeditious approach to legal actions, its proceedings are inquisitorial in nature and characterised by extensive pre-trial investigations. Furthermore, the tribunal president or a member of the tribunal is empowered to dictate the pace of proceedings.

The tribunal’s seat will be at the Booysens Magistrate’s Court, Johannesburg, but Makhanya may schedule hearings of the tribunal at any High Court or Magistrate’s Court in the Republic, the regulations state.

In other news – DA wants Bojanala officials summoned over non-payment of salaries

The DA has called on the chairperson of the provincial public accounts committee Job Dliso to urgently summon the political leadership and senior managers of Bojanala District Municipality to account for the municipality’s dire financial state that has again led to the non-payment of salaries. The party spokesperson on cooperative governance, human settlements and traditional affairs Freddy Sonakile said the party would write to Dliso to call the municipality to account.

Salaries

“We will further request Dliso to call on departments of finance and cooperative governance, human settlements and traditional affairs to account for the lack of consequence management within this municipality despite their repeated failure to fulfil their financial obligations as required of a district municipality by legislation. Read more

Source: IOL

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