R2K Statement on Nkandla: Abuse of national security is a symbol of the Zuma presidency
The Right2Know Campaign condemns the security cluster ministers' announcement that they will challenge the Public Protector's report on Nkandla in the High Court.
This move is the latest example of the use of ‘state security' structures to infringe on democratic processes and undermine accountability.
We note that the ministers have already gone to great lengths to obstruct the Public Protector's Nkandla investigation, starting as early as May 2013, when the security cluster ministers and Chief State Law Adviser met with the public protector in an apparent attempt to persuade her to halt the investigation[1]. Since then, the Ministers have made public statements to discredit the report's findings before it was even released, and already made one abortive attempt in court to prevent the report's release.
South Africans need to take note of how easily expansive "National Security" priorities are be distorted and can encroach on democratic principles; in the wrong hands, "national security" can and has been used as an excuse to stifle debate, undermine accountability and protect the powerful from embarrassment.
The outrageous spending of R246-million to upgrade the President's personal home (including luxury features that were not related to security), is itself a distortion of "national security" priorities, especially since it used funds that were ear-marked for pro-poor urban upgrading programmes [2]. Nkandla is a case study of why "national security" matters need to be subject to greater independent and public oversight, by bodies such as the Public Protector.