The purpose of a presidentially appointed commission of inquiry is that it serves as an instrument of policy advice. An objective look at an issue troubling government by judges sworn to act without fear, favour or prejudice is a salutary way of gleaning unbiased guidance on thorny issues that may confront the government of the day from time to time.
The independence of judges and their professional commitment to uphold the rule of law and the Constitution lend an aura of respectability to judicial commissions of inquiry. A commission of inquiry on which three judges sit is usually regarded as completely beyond reproach, and rightly so: if our president cannot trust our judges to fulfil their functions with probity, integrity and accountability, who can he trust?
It is accordingly a matter of grave concern to note that a Pretoria attorney, Norman Moabi, who was appointed as a senior investigator to assist the Seriti Arms Procurement Commission, has resigned with immediate effect and has made his reasons for so doing a matter of public record. Moabi has impeccable credentials: he is a former acting judge (which implies that a judge president has confidence in him) and a law society member (which means that his colleagues look up to him as a leader).
Three judges preside in the Commission, Judge Willie Seriti is the chairperson and he is assisted by judges Musi and Legodi. The appointment of the Commission followed litigation in the Constitutional Court to compel the President to do so, on the basis of the allegations of impropriety which have swirled around the arms deals since their inception in a previous century. The president conceded the merits of the case without ever traversing or challenging the substance of the claims of malfeasance and misfeasance made in the papers placed before the Constitutional Court.
The source of concern is that Attorney Moabi alleges a "second agenda" in his letter of resignation. He accuses Judge Seriti of "total obsession with the control of the flow of information to and from the Commission". Briefs to evidence leaders are clandestinely prepared by unknown persons "who dictate which evidence leaders will deal with which witnesses and why". According to Moabi, queries are channelled through only one person and professional staff members are kept in the dark as to the content of briefs to evidence leaders. Instead staff is distracted with irrelevancies and excluded from giving input inconsistent with the "second agenda". The Secretariat and the Communications department are kept on a tight rein with "no independent powers to decide on anything". Moabi also raises the spectre of nepotism in relation to the administration of the Commission.
Two somewhat chilling quotes are furnished in the letter of resignation. The first amounts to a thinly veiled threat: "When we have dealt with the first witnesses, they will not again make noises in the public media". In the context of the general thrust of the letter it appears that the quotes are attributable to Judge Seriti himself. The second is breath-taking for its ignorance of the factual matrix which the Commission has been examining for over a year: "When you look at the submissions made by Terry Crawford Browne... you realise that they are not factual but are based on hearsay. There is no substance in what they have said..."