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Impatience grows in Parliament over slow pace of Lottery corruption prosecutions

Impatience grows in Parliament over slow pace of Lottery corruption prosecutions
The new National Lotteries Commission board is intent on holding those who corrupted the organisation accountable. (Illustration: Lisa Nelson)

‘We hear a lot of investigation this, investigation that, but we don’t see anyone going to jail’ says MP.

The National Lotteries Commission (NLC) and the minister with oversight of the Lottery are both concerned that no one involved in the fraud and corruption that overwhelmed the organisation in recent years has yet been formally charged and prosecuted, Parliament has been told.

Barney Pityana, chairperson of the board of NLC, told Parliament’s Trade, Industry and Competition Portfolio Committee that Minister Ebrahim Patel had expressed concerns to him about the “slow pace” of legal action to hold implicated people to account.

Pityana was part of an NLC delegation that last week briefed the committee on the Commission’s second and third-quarter financial results.

Almost two and a half years have passed since then-acting Commissioner Lionel October told the same committee in 2020 that a dossier of alleged corruption compiled by independent audit firm Nexia SAB&T had been handed to police. The dossier consisted of investigations into four dodgy grants and implicated former NLC chief operating officer Phillemon Letwaba, his family, and some of his associates.

GroundUp has also reported extensively since 2018 on looting at the Lottery.

New NLC commissioner Jodi Scholtz told MPs last week that she had referred 12 matters of alleged corruption to the Special Investigating Unit (SIU).

The SIU is empowered to recover assets acquired through corruption involving State funds. But it does not have prosecutorial powers. Instead, the results of SIU investigations are handed to the police to do any additional investigation necessary and prepare a docket to hand to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) for a decision on whether to prosecute.

The NPA did not respond to questions sent to two email addresses used for media inquiries.

During the second quarter of 2022, 52 matters involving dodgy grants were reported to the NLC for investigation, according to last week’s NLC presentation to Parliament. In the third quarter of 2022, a further 56 matters were reported to the NLC, with misuse of funds, fraud and fraudulent applications making up the highest number of matters.

Concerns raised in Parliament

MPs from various political parties serving on the portfolio committee also raised concerns about the lack of prosecutions of people implicated in the looting of the Lottery, which the SIU has estimated to be over R1.4-billion.

MP Khonziwe Hlonyana (EFF) said, “We hear a lot of investigation this, investigation that, but we don’t see anyone going to jail. It would have been very nice seeing someone going to jail for what people have done in mismanaging the monies that could have assisted the poorest of the poor.”

Pityana told MPs that Patel had raised two issues of concern with him when he briefed the minister recently. The minister had asked him whether money that “has been abused has been retrieved or not” and wanted to know what steps were being taken to retrieve money lost to corruption. “The second one he has expressed concern about is whether, and what will it take, to see the beginnings of prosecutions,” said Pityana.

He said it was urgent to see accountability, including about the recovery of the money. “That process is part of our continuous engagement with the SIU.

“The SIU has informed us that they have submitted a docket to the NPA and they await the decision [of the NPA] in due course.”

Scholtz, who took over as NLC commissioner at the beginning of February, told the committee: “I share sentiments about people not going to jail.” She said the NLC had held discussions the previous day about the disciplinary processes against matters suspended NLC employees” and how we can move more expeditiously”.

“There are planned meetings between myself and the NPA … The SIU has referred 12 matters to the NPA and part of my work is making sure that we follow up on those,” Scholtz said.

Tintswalo Nkuna, NLC head of regulatory compliance, who has previously acted as Commissioner, told the committee, “We do take note and share the concerns on the timely completion of those investigations.

“Investigations that have been conducted [by the NLC] relate to allegations of misuse of funds… When we do prove those allegations to be factual … the first instance is to report such matters to the SA Police Services.

“There are also matters that have been referred to the SIU as part of their investigation as they had, for example, picked up patterns with regard to the funding of sports clubs where there has been a misuse of funds,” Nkuna said.

“We are also constantly engaging with the SAPS to ensure that there is a speedy resolution to those investigations.” DM

First published by GroundUp.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Rory Macnamara says:

    Impatience grows in South Africa about the parliamentarians mentioned in the State Capture report who remain untouched. Of course the Lotto thieves and all the others. parliament look at the three fingers pointing at yourselves!

  • Jane Crankshaw says:

    Where there’s a will, there’s a way. There just isn’t any willingness to prosecute these and other criminals who think their political connectivity will protect them – and protected they are!
    The very fabric of our society is broken – whether it can be fixed remains to be seen but when people stoop to stealing from charitable organisation, it seems unlikely. This is a new low in SA’s “ Rainbow Nation history”

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