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Mokotedi Mpshe. Sapa
NPA 'steals' judgment?
Wed, 15 Apr 2009 12:00
The NPA's statement explaining its decision to drop charges
against ANC president Jacob Zuma closely resembles a judgment
handed down in Hong Kong six years ago, according to an article on
the website politicsweb.co.za.
A ruling handed down on 13 December 2002 in Hong Kong by
Justice Conrad Seagroatt cites British Commonwealth judgments that
acting prosecutions boss Mokotedi Mpshe refers to in his statement,
noted politicsweb's editor James Myburgh in his article, dated
14 April.
"Even more strikingly the phrases quoted are almost all the same
as well ? give or take some self-serving summarising, truncation
and rewriting by the NPA," Myburgh pointed out, comparing more than
a dozen sections from Mpshe's statement and the judgment.
The Hong Kong judgment was overturned on appeal.
Myburgh questioned whether the rulings Mpshe leaned on were
"really relevant" to his decision to drop charges against Zuma.
"This is not just because South Africa has its own common law
and Constitution, but because these judgments all discuss the
considerations that the courts should weigh up when asked to stay
proceedings.
"One would not know this from Mpshe's decision as most
references to 'the court' have been excised and replaced with
phrases such as the 'criminal justice process'," said Myburgh.
Seagroatt's concluding remarks also seemed to presage by some
six-and-a-half years, almost to the word, the following comment
from Mpshe:
"It is against this broad principle of abuse of process that the
conduct of Mr McCarthy must be seen and tested. The question for
close consideration is encapsulated in expressions such as ?so
gravely wrong', ?gross neglect of the elementary principles of
fairness', ?so unfair and wrong', ?misusing or manipulating the
process of the court.' If the conduct can be so categorised, it
would be unconscionable for the trial to continue."
According to Seagroatt: "It is against this evolved statement of
broad principle that the prosecution's failures and shortcomings
with regard to disclosure must be seen and tested. Those for close
consideration are best summed up by such expressions as 'so gravely
wrong', 'gross neglect of the elementary principles of fairness',
'so unfair and wrong', 'misusing or manipulating the process of the
court'. If those failures can properly be so categorised, are they
such as to make it unconscionable that a re-trial should go
forward?"
Responding to the article, National Prosecuting Authority
spokesman Tlali Tlali told The Star: "We are recognising that what we
said was based on that judgment and we are in no way attempting to
pass that ruling off as our own.
"We regret the oversight, but it in no way detracts from the
decision that advocate Mpshe reached."