NPA’s delays in the On Point Engineering corruption case are an obstruction to justice
24 August 2022
The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) has yet again demonstrated its unwillingness to take corruption cases seriously, and its propensity to kick the can in the hope that AfriForum’s Private Prosecution Unit’s interest in a matter will wane.
Eight years after the On Point Engineering case was withdrawn, neither EFF leader Julius Malema nor any of his four co-accused have been brought back to court to answer to the allegations of fraud and money laundering, linked to a Limpopo Department of Roads and Transport tender worth R52-million.
AfriForum’s Private Prosecution Unit wants to know why and has previously written to National Director of Public Prosecutions, Advocate Shamila Batohi, to find out. The latest response from the highest levels of leadership in the NPA is not only dismissive but generates more questions than it provides answers. This conduct flies in the face of recent commitments to the fight against corruption by the Minister of Justice, Ronald Lamola, in Parliament.
In November 2019, after the Unit filed a mandamus application against the NPA, it was announced that a case would proceed against four of the On Point Engineering accused – but not Malema. Head of the NPA’s National Prosecution Service, Adv. Rodney de Kock told the Unit in a letter that there was not enough evidence against Malema to sustain case against him – a claim the unit strongly rejects.