Over the past few weeks Jacob Zuma, and his two legal henchmen, have made a series of questionable statements and decisions on the judiciary. Each, on its own, does not amount to much, but together they raise serious questions about the new government's attitude to the courts.
The first bad sign was, of course, Zuma's choice of henchmen. First off, he chose Jeff Radebe to replace the well-regarded Enver Surty as Minister of Justice. Despite his legal training in the German Democratic Republic, Radebe's understanding of South African legal principles appears poorly grounded (see here and here). Moreover, while serving as Minister of Public Enterprises he found himself at the sharp end of an independent judiciary. Back in 2003 the high court ordered that Transnet pay R57m to a losing bidder, after he had meddled in a tender contract.
As the Mail & Guardian reported at the time: Radebe had told "Transnet to hand a privatisation tender to a company that was patently unsuited to the job, but in which the ruling African National Congress had an alleged financial stake. Now, after a drawn-out court battle over the tender award, the transport parastatal has to pay R57-million in damages to a bidder it knew to be better qualified, but which it dropped after Radebe's intervention."
In more robust liberal democracies such scandals generally lead to ministers losing their jobs, and ruling parties their majorities. It was Radebe's good fortune that ANC dominance meant that he did not have to face the repercussions that usually follow from such exposure. Of course, if the relationship between the executive and the judiciary had been run on more sensible lines - as in the old GDR and other People's Democracies - Radebe would have been spared such indignity and embarrassment at the outset.
Then, former Limpopo premier Ngoako Ramalthodi was appointed chairman of the parliamentary portfolio committee on justice and constitutional development, and also made Zuma's ‘point man' in the Judicial Services Commission. Like Radebe Ramatlhodi has good reason to fear and distrust an independent judiciary.
According to the M&G the Directorate of Special Operations believed that they had a strong enough case to prosecute Ramatlhodi on corruption relating to tender fraud in Limpopo. But as would later happen with Zuma, the acting NDPP, Moketedi Mpshe, overruled their decision in November 2008 after "Ramatlhodi made representations to him."