South Africa News

Former Cabinet minister Malusi Gigaba off the hook in Gupta citizenship saga

Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane has found former Cabinet minister Malusi Gigaba did not abuse his powers when he granted the Guptas citizenship while he was minister of Home Affairs.

Mkhwebane’s office released the finding of her investigation into Gigaba – one of eight reports – on Monday following a more than two-year probe into the matter.

Malusi Gigaba

According to her findings, Gigaba, while exercising his discretion as minister of home affairs in granting the Guptas naturalisation, had, however, breached the ethics code by not tabling their names in Parliament as required by law and that he made “misrepresentations in relation to that naturalisation process” during a press conference in 2018 when he denied Atul and Ajay Gupta were not citizens of South Africa.

The public protector probe into how the controversial family from India were given South African citizenship came after DA MP Haniff Hoosen and EFF MP Floyd Shivambu laid complaints about how they were given citizenship.

Malusi Gigaba

Mkhwebane found the process of naturalisation in terms of Section 5(9)(a) of the South African Citizenship Act, 1995, appeared to be inadequately regulated and, as such, due diligence was compromised, resulting in inadequate submissions by officials to ministers.

“In this regard, ministers are put at the risk of exercising their discretion on insufficient information,” the summarised version of the report stated.

“The public protector found that former minister Gigaba did not abuse the powers he was afforded in terms of the South African Citizenship Amendment Act, 2010, when granting certificates of early naturalisation to his alleged acquaintances, Mr Ajay Gupta and family, without proper validation of the requisite exceptional circumstances.

“Section 5(9)(a) of the South African Citizenship Amendment Act, 2010, bestows upon Minister of Home Affairs the discretion to waive the requirements of section 5(1)(c) if, in his opinion, exceptional circumstances exist that warrants the applicants continued residence within the Republic of South Africa,” the report said.

The report found Gigaba was in breach of the Executive Ethics Code by failing to submit the names of persons who were granted South African citizenship under exceptional circumstances to Parliament every year, as required in terms section 5(9)(b) of the South African Citizenship Act, 1995.

Mkhwebane found that Gigaba “misrepresented facts” at a press conference held on March 6, 2018, when he denied that Atul Gupta was not a citizen of South Africa and even though he rectified the mistake the next day he had broken the public trust placed upon him in terms of Parliament Ethics Code.

The public protector noted that any remedial action against Gigaba would serve no “judicious purpose” as he had resigned as a Member of Parliament and minister of home affairs.

In other news – Insider spills the tea on Jacob Zuma and Julius Malema meeting

The ANC in Kwazulu-natal says that it will meet former president Jacob Zuma this week to understand the basis of having a tea meeting with EFF leader Julius Malema “in the current environment. Learn more

Source: IOL

Back to top button