Corruption in South Africa

Corruption in South Africa includes the private use of public resources, bribery and improper favouritism.[1] The 2012 Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index assigned South Africa an index of 4.3, ranking South Africa 69th out of 176 countries (tied with Brazil and Macedonia).[2] (/ access to parliament 2004 }]

South Africa has a robust anti-corruption framework, but laws are inadequately enforced.[3] Two forms of corruption are particularly prevalent in South Africa; tenderpreneurism and BEE fronting.

Tenderpreneurism

Main article: Tenderpreneur

A tenderpreneur is an individual who enriches themselves through corrupting the awarding of government tender contracts, mostly based on personal connections and corrupt relationships - although outright bribery might also take place - and sometimes involving an elected or politically appointed official (or his or her family members) holding simultaneous business interests.[4] This is often accompanied by overcharging and shoddy workmanship.

BEE Fronting

BEE-fronting is an abuse of the rules governing Black Economic Empowerment (BEE), where qualifying persons are given a seat on the Board of Directors of a company while having no decision-making power in the company, in order to qualify the company for government contracts in terms of BEE.

Related to this is Cadre deployment and employment, which is an official ANC policy.[5]

Anti-corruption initiatives

Government initiatives against corruption are coordinated by the Department of Public Service and Administration.[6]

The Public Protector also plays a role in fighting corruption.

A disbanded independent unit Scorpions (South Africa) was replaced by the Hawks (South Africa) which is subordinate to the police's " The Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation ".

Notable incidents of fraud and corruption

References

  1. Tom Lodge, "Political Corruption in South Africa", Political corruption
  2. "Corruption Perceptions Index 2012 Results". Transparency International. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  3. "Business Corruption in South Africa". Business Anti-Corruption Portal. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  4. Bloom, Jack (10 May 2010). "Empowerment vs Tenderpreneurship". Politicsweb. Retrieved 26 April 2011. Rational incentives and a corruption-free tender process are the best way to broaden opportunities for those who were previously excluded. Otherwise, expect more window-dressing and backroom deals that don't grow the economy or create new jobs.
  5. http://www.anc.org.za/show.php?id=134
  6. "Welcome to the official South African government online site! - South African Government" (PDF).
  7. Meldrum, Andrew (25 January 2005). "40 accused in South African MPs' fraud case". The Guardian. Pretoria. Retrieved 25 April 2011. Forty South African members of parliament, past and present, are to be charged with fraud today in the biggest corruption scandal in the country's post-apartheid history. The 40 MPs - 27 current and 13 former - will be charged with illegally using parliamentary travel vouchers worth £1.5m to pay for lavish trips for themselves and relatives, according to prosecutors.
  8. "Yengeni cop found guilty". News24. Cape Town. SAPA. 30 November 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2011. Former Goodwood police station commander Siphiwo Hewana was on Monday found guilty of attempting to defeat the ends of justice. Hewana appeared in the Parow Regional Court before magistrate Elsa van Zyl.
  9. "South Africa ex-police head Selebi guilty of corruption". BBC News. 2 July 2010. Retrieved 26 April 2011. A court in South Africa has found the country's former chief of police Jackie Selebi guilty of corruption. Selebi, also a former president of Interpol, was accused of having links to organised crime and accepting bribes worth 1.2m rand ($156,000, £103,000).

External links

A world map of the 2015 Corruption Perceptions Index by Transparency International


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