Former S.African police chief found guilty of graft

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – The former head of South  Africa’s police force was found guilty on graft charges yesterday, making him one of the most senior officials to be  brought to justice for corruption in the country.

Prosecutors said Jackie Selebi, formerly a leading  anti-apartheid activist and well-connected in the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party, had links to organised crime and  received about 1.2 million rand ($155,200) to ignore drug  trafficking.

Judge Meyer Joffe said he found Selebi, a former Interpol  president and an ally of ex-South African President Thabo Mbeki,  guilty of corruption.

Selebi smirked when asked to comment after the judgment and  told Reuters he had “absolutely nothing” to say about the  verdict.

The judge said prosecutors had proven during that Selebi had  received at least 120,000 rand from Glenn Agliotti, a convicted  drug trafficker who was one of the main prosecution witnesses.  Selebi will be sentenced on July 14-15.

Joffe found Selebi not guilty of defeating the ends of  justice but said he did not find the former national  commissioner of the South African Police Service (SAPS) a  credible witness.

“It is never pleasant to make an adverse credibility finding  against a witness. It stigmatises the witness as a liar, a person  of low moral fibre. It is a stigma that remains forever. It is  so much more unpleasant to make such a finding against the  person (formerly) at the head of SAPS,” Joffe said.

Analysts said the verdict would not have any major impact on  President Jacob Zuma.

“There are no political ramifications, since the case has  dragged on for so long, and the links between Zuma and Selebi  are sufficiently distant and obscure,” said Nel Marais,  political analyst at Executive Research Associates.

The guilty verdict on someone who was previously the  country’s top policeman also had positive implications.

“Given that the country does have a growing corruption problem, it is a positive development that our courts and our  prosecutors have the courage to convict someone so senior,” said  Gary van Staden, political analyst with independent economists  NKC.

The ruling ANC said the verdict showed no-one was above the  law in South Africa.

“The conclusion of the case today … clearly indicates that  South Africa as a country is governed by laws that are applied  without any fear or favour to anyone, regardless of their  standing,” the ANC said in a statement.

Selebi was suspended as national police head in January  2008. Critics of former President Mbeki, who stepped down as the  country’s leader under pressure from the ruling party in  September 2008, accused him of protecting Selebi.

Selebi argued during the trial that he had been the victim  of a conspiracy but Joffe dismissed this on Friday, saying there  was no political conspiracy to prosecute the former police  chief.