Despite the Supreme Court of Appeal’s recent ruling that drunk drivers would have to forfeit their vehicles, the ruling party has a history of leniency in disciplining top officials accused of driving under the influence. In November last year, former director general of correctional services Linda Mti was released on a warning after the car he was driving collided with another car — while he was allegedly drunk.
He was not disciplined by the African National Congress (ANC), but he voluntarily retired from his post to join the 2010 World Cup’s local organising committee as its head of security.
Ekurhuleni metro police chief Robert McBride, who rolled his car last December while driving on the R511 near Centurion, faces the minor charge of reckless driving despite being described by several witnesses as being ‘blind drunk†at the scene of the accident.
Some witnesses also claimed that McBride’s colleagues, who were operating outside of their jurisdiction when they came to his rescue, threatened and assaulted bystanders and removed evidence from McBride’s car. His blood was not tested for alcohol content.
McBride’s boss, Ekurhuleni mayor Duma Nkosi, defended his metro police chief just hours after the accident, even though police had only begun investigating the incident. Nkosi also failed to confirm whether a breathalyser test had been conducted at the scene, and brazenly claimed that McBride was sober enough to drive, saying it was ‘unfortunate†that ‘some people took the view that he was drunkâ€.
The ANC’s lack of disciplinary rigour in its handling of these cases is part of a pattern. In 1999, ANC senior party adviser and Cape Metropolitan Council (CMC) executive committee member Mzukisi Gaba was convicted of driving under the influence and fined R12 000 or six months in jail. Although the council suspended him after the verdict, the ANC called for his suspension to be lifted immediately, remarking that he had ‘suffered enoughâ€. He was reappointed to the CMC in 1999.
In December 2005, Eastern Cape ANC legislature member Mike Basopu was arrested for a second time that year on charges of driving while under the influence of alcohol. In both instances, the ANC turned a blind eye. Basopu was nabbed yet again this month for drunk driving. Although he appeared in the East London Magistrate’s Court earlier this week, the case was withdrawn pending the result of a blood analysis. He remains the portfolio chairperson for the provincial health committee.
Earlier last year, North West ANC member of the legislature Ndleleni Duma received a standing ovation from his party in a show of moral support ahead of his court case on charges of drunken driving. After a protracted trial he was acquitted on a technicality, when the magistrate found that the route he was said to be driving on at the time of his arrest was not properly noted on the charge sheet.
Duma also pleaded guilty to a charge of theft of R51Â 000 and was fined R30Â 000 in the Travelgate scandal. He remains provincial minister for sports, arts and culture in North West.