Parliament's decision not to pursue Travelgate claims makes mockery of Zuma's corruption promises
A report in the Sunday Times this week indicates that National Parliament Speaker Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde has decided not to pursue Travelgate claims against more than 60 MPs implicated in Travelgate. If this is the case, then it makes a mockery of Presidential candidate Jacob Zuma's promises to crack down hard on corruption.
If the new Speaker of Parliament, who is a representative of the new Zuma regime, cannot take a firm stand against members of parliament who abused their travel vouchers, then it creates the impression that the ruling party's new commitment has no substance.
It was revealed in the Sunday Times this week that last year, the former parliamentary speaker spent R370 000 of public money to buy up the debtors' book of one of the travel agents involved in Travelgate, and so prevent the MPs implicated from being sued by travel agents for the money they owe.
At the time a decision on whether parliament itself would pursue these claims was left open. It appears from this report that the decision has been made not to pursue these claims. So while parliament has the opportunity to recoup some of the R370 000 spent on buying the debtor's book, and to send a clear message out to South Africa about the new regime's refusal to tolerate corruption, it has chosen not to do so.