I’m still gobsmacked by extent of state capture devastation – NPA’s Hermione Cronje
She said, while the courts had been open during the lockdown, there were logistical issues which have made it difficult to bring the matters to court. However, she believed that as the lockdown was eased, it would be easier to bring the matters to court.
The Investigative Directorate is also working on the Estina matter. Cronjé said several matters in that case required mutual legal assistance from abroad, with which the executive had been helping.
“We’re still awaiting further assistance from the UAE,” she said.
“We are determined to get the evidence we need so that we have the full scope of those that are responsible in that matter before court,” she said.
On Monday, Justice and Correctional Services Minister Ronald Lamola said discussions with the United Arab Emirates about the extradition of the Gupta brothers and their associates are “progressing very well”.
Turning to their investigations into state owned enterprises, Cronjé said in December there were arrests of “what people would call low hanging fruit”.
“But those arrests do not address what we believe are the people most responsible for what happened in the SOEs.
She said they had a matter related to Transnet before court.
READ MORE | You will soon see things starting to happen – NPA’s Hermione Cronje assures frustrated South Africans
Cronjé told the committee that many people asked them to go after the “low hanging fruit”, but it would be a “grave dissatisfaction” to prosecute low-level officials.
National Director of Public Prosecutions Shamila Batohi said people needed to understand that they were operating in “a very inefficient system”. They now had plans in place to address these inefficiencies, she said.
“We want to build a system that can respond to these crimes,” Batohi said.
“I can say absolutely categorically that there has been absolutely no interference in the work of the NPA,” she said.
“It is sometimes not as fast as people would like, but it is hugely important that we get things right.”
Cronjé said on Thursday that it was the first year anniversary of her appointment.
“Needless to say, there wasn’t much celebration,” she added wryly.
Meanwhile, the Zondo commission was spending the lockdown going through the “masses of written evidence”, acting director general of the Department of Justice, JB Skosana, told the committee.
He said hearings would continue until September or October.