Media Statement

7 August 2020
Issued by the office of the SACC General Secretary, Bishop Malusi Mpumlwana.

There comes a time when the moral depravity of some in positions of authority, and in the private sector, undermine the very notion of nationhood and the underlying value of public service.

After years of state capture and unethical governance, and more recently, largescale looting of Covid-19 emergency funding, that time is upon us.

We are compelled to assert: This is not how we shall be known as a nation. We refuse to allow corrupt networks in different provinces to go about their criminal activity, trampling on the rights of honest and law-abiding people!

The South African Council of Churches (SACC) therefore, together with the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, the Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation, the Nelson Mandela Foundation, the Foundation for Human Rights and the Council for the Advancement of South African Constitution (CASAC), calls on all who live in South Africa to act against corruption.

In the next week, the SACC and its partner organisations will work with a number of other formations, academics, and legal experts to mobilise a comprehensive societal response against corruption. This includes the reopening of the ‘Unburdening Panel’ for whistleblowers and public servants to report corruption, as well as a national call for the public to demonstrate their outrage at not only the looting, but the lack of consequences for it.

In a build up to this, we call on the public to make the following pledge:

  1. On building an ethical state
    1. Refuse to allow Constitutional rights to be eroded by a network of thieves and thugs. Corrupt politicians, business people, officials and professionals must not ‘get away with murder’. By preventing looting during a pandemic, we can indeed be the difference between life and death;
    2. Name and shame the corrupt, and support and strengthen honest public servants and whistleblowers; and,
    3. Call for government to ensure that all public representatives and political party executive committee members, and their immediate families, as well as all civil servants not be allowed to conduct business with the state.
  1. On transparency:
    • Demand that budgets for all Covid-19 related contracts at all levels of government are made public, along with the unit prices paid per item/ for services; and,
    • Demand that government makes public its spending of the R500 billion stimulus package, and call on the Solidarity Fund to do likewise. Practical measures should be put in place to ensure all further expenditure of these funds, as well as the IMF loan, is made public in real-time.
  2. On accountability:
    • Demand that government recoups all funds lost through irregular and corrupt Covid-19 contracts; and,
    • Use whatever means of mobilisation possible under Covid-19 restrictions to make it known to government that we will not accept its ‘paper commitments’ about tackling corruption. Ensure that those implicated in corrupt activities are investigated and prosecuted. We want to see the corrupt in jail!

The state cannot tell us that they did not know that the ‘predators’ were waiting to ‘eat’ early on in the pandemic.

  • The SACC warned about this in April and called for specific Covid-19 corruption busting measures.
  • Likewise, in May, the Kathrada Foundation and several civil society organisations made practical recommendations to monitor how the R500 billion was going to be spent by government. These included transparency and the effective use of the online portal of the e-tender system; and the involvement of trustworthy people outside of government to help monitor the use of funds and resources.
  • CASAC has for some time called for the establishment of a dedicated independent anti-corruption entity with teeth.
  • The Foundation for Human Rights has called for accountability and visible consequences for corrupt acts; for without that, we have unbridled impunity. Weak law enforcement mechanisms, poor investigations and too few prosecutions regarding corruption, feed into this impunity.
  • The Nelson Mandela Foundation has been advocating for developing a social contract by and with the people. Such a social contract must be mounted on the principles of integrity and ethical conduct.
  • The Tutu Legacy Foundation at the passing of Rivonia Trialist, Andrew Mlangeni, highlighted that he “continued to speak out against corruption, for morality and fairness within his beloved ANC and in government”.  He said, “I did not go to prison for 26 years for people to steal from the poor.” The Tutu Legacy Foundation calls for South Africans to develop a new values-based social compact, with young people in the vanguard. Many older South Africans, with vivid memories of apartheid and the struggle, may possibly find it difficult – almost unpatriotic – to criticise or hold the ANC government they brought to power, to account. Our society must break out of that mould. Those who lead and represent us must be held to the highest ethics regardless of their political affiliation.

As Archbishop Desmond Tutu warned in 1998: “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. We so easily jettison the ideals we had when we were struggling. It is important that we retain the vigour of our civil society organs that were part of the struggle… We’ve got to retain the same capacity to smell out corruption, the abuse of power… If they (the government) are the true democrats which we hope they are, they will say: ‘Those are in fact our true friends – the ones who tell us when things are not right.’”

Let us all close ranks and unmask those from within the public and private sector who appear to want to serve society, but have nothing but their own interests at heart; let there be consequences for the corrupt; and let us recover what rightfully belongs to the people.

Names of organisations and persons to respond to media queries:

  • SACC – Moagisi Sibanda – 082 295 1581
  • Ahmed Kathrada Foundation – Neeshan Balton – 082 373 1143
  • CASAC – Lawson Naidoo – 073 158 5736
  • Desmond & Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation – Roger Friedman – 079 896 6899
  • Foundation for Human Rights – lsibiya@fhr.org.za
  • Nelson Mandela Foundation – Luzuko Koti – 082 994 0349

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Media enquiries:
Ms Moagisi Sibanda
Director: Communications
South African Council of Churches
Email: communications@sacc.org.za
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About SACC
The South African Council of Churches (SACC) is an ecumenical association of affiliated Christian Churches, and blocks of churches such as The Evangelical Alliance and the Council of African Independent Churches, with a mandate to lead common Christian action that works for moral witness in South Africa. SACC does not exist for the propagation and the advancement of its doctrinal position, but is the place where our diverse interpretations of our faith come together in action for social justice. It therefore seeks to achieve a visible, just socio-economic and ecological impact, enabled through engaged churches-in-community for a reconciled South Africa and our sub-continent.