The rule of law is being subverted by party high command
Imagine this for the plot of a political thriller set in an obscure country. The former head of police is on trial for corruption. One of the witnesses for the prosecution is implicated in the killing of a businessman who had given financial favours to the ruling party. A new head of national intelligence has just been appointed; he had previously plotted against the head of national prosecutions, and his brother had been convicted of fraud and sentenced to 15 years in jail. The fraudster brother had had dealings with a leading politician, who was then charged with corruption.
After a dramatic factional fight within the ruling party, this politician became its leader. The fraudster was released from jail on the grounds of ill-health, but there were soon reports of his gallivanting about town in fine fettle. The corruption charges were dropped against the politician and he went on to become president of the country. Under his government, the selection of judges fell under the control of the ruling party, and during the interviews prospective judges were subjected to bizarre questioning and racial slurs. During the trial of the ex-head of police, the witness suspected of killing the businessman burst into tears.
The problem with this murky, complicated and unlikely plot is that it is real and set in South Africa right now. South Africans have become so inured to the baleful events unfolding month after month that they might not see the danger mounting before them.
This week, President Zuma appointed Mo Shaik as head of the South African Secret Service. Mo is the brother of Schabir Shaik, who was Zuma's financial advisor before he was convicted of fraud and corruption associated with the arms deal and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. Mo, himself, was posted as a diplomat to Hamburg at the time when the Mbeki administration re-opened the corvette contract in the arms deal which was subsequently awarded to a German company which awarded a subcontract to a firm in which Schabir Shaik was a partner, and Chippy Shaik reportedly received a 3-million dollar bribe from a German company. Furthermore, Mo, in trying to defend Zuma against possible prosecution by the then National Director of Public Prosecutions, Bulelani Ngcuka, had attempted to falsely malign Ngcuka as having been an apartheid spy.
In this week, too, the trial began of the former National Police Commissioner, Jackie Selebi, charged with corruption and defeating the ends of justice. Glenn Agliotti, accused of plotting the "assisted suicide" of businessman Brett Kebble, is a state witness.