Why have the South African Police Service Informed the Public as “who is to blame”?
Ha Ha Ha!
Nkandla
files laptop stolen under
suspicious circumstances
Durban – The office of the man representing the 12
Nkandla “scapegoats” has been burgled – on the eve of the civil servants’
potentially explosive hearings.
Having somehow got past guards and into an 11th
floor Durban union office, they stole the personal laptop of Claude Naicker,
KwaZulu-Natal manager of the Public Servants Association (PSA), while ignoring
DVD players, other valuables and all other offices.
Elevator cameras were “not working” on Friday
night, when building security believe the break-in happened.
Misconduct charges
Naicker’s team is representing 12 public works
officials who on Tuesday will be formally charged with misconduct and tens of
millions in irregular expenditure on the upgrade to President Jacob Zuma’s
home. He said two more officials on Monday requested representation in the
disciplinary hearings, bringing the total to 12.
Naicker revealed his labour relations officer
Roshan Lil-Ruthan would request postponements in all 12 cases on Tuesday, “so
we can receive and read the evidence brought by the employer”.
A report by the Special Investigating Unit (SUI)
fingers the officials for breaching procurement procedures, but admits none of
the employees benefitted financially for their alleged misconduct.
While former public works directors-general are
also facing charges, no politician has yet been charged or disciplined in the
R246m overspending scandal.
Nkandla files
On Monday, the PSA held a meeting to discuss what
Nkandla materials were on the laptop and whether it could have been targeted by
unknown parties concerned about the employees’ testimony.
One assistant told Naicker: “They must have been
after your Nkandla files.”
The Witness understands some stokvel money may also
have been taken.
However, Naicker said he was more sceptical, saying
he considered an Nkandla-related motive for the crime a “remote possibility –
maybe a five percent chance”.
“But you never know. If that’s what it was about,
that would be chilling,” he said.
He said: “The first thing my staff said to me was:
‘How much Nkandla material was on there?’ It was strange they only went to my
office and only took my laptop and did not take the DVD player there or some
liquor that was there from a previous party.
“Also, they went to a great deal of trouble to get
in – we have a pretty immovable padlock; they had to go through a small glass
pane. The reason I don’t think it was connected is that there have been other
break-ins in recently”.
Security concerns
He said some of the public servants represented by
the PSA have expressed concerns about their personal security during the
multi-week disciplinary process.
Naicker’s team interviewed the 12 public works
employees last week, but said their interviews had not been downloaded to his
laptop.
Among them is project manager Jean Rindel – facing
eight charges of misconduct. Like his colleagues, Rindel has denied all
charges.
While Lil-Ruthan has called his clients
“scapegoats”, Naicker said: “I’m hesitant to use words like scapegoat or
fall-guy – it may be an unfortunate case of a department wanting to be seen to
be fully investigating a very public problem. But these charges are unfair –
and they are already having a negative impact on these members and their
families. The signs of stress and anguish are clearly visible; there is real concern
about loss of jobs for people who have served the department diligently for
decades in some cases.”
He said the laptop had held “valuable information”,
but that much of it was “personal”.
News24 / The Witness