By Prof. Busisiwe Mavuso
- Vincent Smith’s seven-year sentence for Bosasa bribes is the first major state capture conviction after years of waiting. The NPA must now prosecute others Zondo identified, including Zuma, Zwane, Myeni, and Moyane, to prove this is sustained accountability, not an isolated case.
- Health sector accountability is advancing with the arrests of Director-General Buthelezi and senior managers on fraud charges. The systemic procurement corruption exemplified by Tembisa Hospital’s R2bn irregularities and Babita Deokaran’s murder shows the importance of a cleanup across the health system.
- Eskom is initiating a PAJA-based process to potentially cut off municipalities owing R110bn (half its net assets) after Treasury’s negotiated debt plan failed. Doing this in an election year may prompt voters to demand that candidates explain how they’ll ensure utilities are paid.
- Accountability must work simultaneously at all three government levels: national political prosecutions, departmental integrity reforms, and local government financial management, because the system only functions when consequences run from leadership through departments to municipalities.
Progress on accountability is finally visible in South Africa, though the pace remains frustratingly slow. Last week’s sentencing of former ANC MP Vincent Smith to seven years’ imprisonment represents the first major state capture conviction, a breakthrough after years of waiting for justice.
Smith was convicted of accepting R800,000 in bribes from facilities management company Bosasa whilst chairing parliament’s portfolio committee on justice and correctional services. Bosasa had been awarded over R1bn in contracts by the Department of Correctional Services, and Smith had turned from critic to champion of Bosasa, using his parliamentary position. The Zondo Commission concluded that he had breached his oath as an MP to uphold the Constitution. Smith also failed to declare R21m in earnings his company received over nine years to SARS.
Smith’s conviction sends an important signal: powerful politicians are not beyond reach. But the question now is who follows. The Zondo Commission identified numerous individuals who must face prosecution. Former president Jacob Zuma himself was implicated in enabling state capture. Former mineral resources minister Mosebenzi Zwane was found to have facilitated the Guptas’ capture of state resources. Former SAA chairperson Dudu Myeni was found to have undermined governance at the airline. Former SARS commissioner Tom Moyane oversaw the deliberate destruction of the revenue service’s capacity. The National Prosecuting Authority must demonstrate that Smith’s conviction is the beginning of sustained accountability, not an isolated case.
Accountability must also reach into government departments where corruption continues to undermine service delivery. Last week saw the arrest of Department of Health Director-General Sandile Buthelezi and two other senior managers on fraud and theft allegations. Full investigations and prosecutions must follow. The public has every right to expect government to operate professionally and honestly.
The health sector has been particularly plagued by procurement corruption. Perhaps most prominent was the case at Tembisa Hospital, where irregular procurement running to R2bn led to the murder of whistleblower Babita Deokaran in 2021. Deokaran headed the Gauteng health department’s anti-corruption unit and was gunned down after flagging irregularities. Last week’s arrests underscore systemic problems in health procurement that rob citizens of services while enriching connected individuals.
The Department of Health must prioritise getting its house in order, including through stronger oversight of provincial health departments where much of the corruption occurs. Cleaning up procurement, professionalising management, and protecting whistleblowers deserve the department’s full attention. Efficient, corruption-free delivery of existing health services must be the priority.
At local government level, the accountability crisis manifests differently but with equally serious consequences. Eskom has been battling for years to collect payment from municipalities that owe R110bn, equivalent to half the utility’s net assets. Many metros and smaller towns use revenue collected for electricity and water to pay for other services, leaving Eskom unpaid and infrastructure unmaintained.
Without resolving this crisis, Eskom faces an impossible position. It cannot raise new finance with such debt on its books. In the competitive electricity market that is emerging from government reforms, Eskom must be financially sound. Yet cutting off municipalities would harm thousands of citizens who pay their bills on time, violating their rights to minimum service levels. The real culprits are municipal officials failing to manage finances appropriately.
Efforts to resolve this have failed. National Treasury developed a negotiated debt plan with municipalities, but many failed to honour the terms. Last week, Eskom stepped up its response, initiating a process under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act that could lead to municipalities being cut off. This approach ensures constitutional rights are properly considered while creating a legal foundation for action. Doing this in a local government election year may also prompt communities to think harder about whom they put into office.
Voters should demand clear answers from candidates: How will you ensure Eskom and water boards are paid? How will you stop revenue meant for infrastructure maintenance from being diverted elsewhere? How will you tackle the culture of non-payment? Without functional municipal finances, no amount of national fiscal discipline or infrastructure spending will deliver the services communities need.
From prosecuting those implicated in state capture, to arresting department heads involved in fraud, to confronting municipal financial mismanagement, this is what rebuilding accountability looks like. It must happen at all three levels of government simultaneously. The system only works when accountability runs from national leadership through departments to municipalities.
Progress is visible but incomplete. One state capture conviction after years of investigation is not enough; we need sustained prosecutions. Health sector arrests must lead to systemic procurement reforms, not just individual cases. Municipal debt requires both immediate consequences for non-payment and long-term governance improvements.
This accountability drive translates into greater trust in government and confidence that public services will be reliably and cleanly delivered. That confidence enables investment, which drives growth and employment. But it requires consistent pressure from civil society, business, and citizens demanding that those entrusted with public resources face real consequences for corruption and mismanagement. BLSA will continue monitoring progress and supporting reforms that strengthen institutional capacity and accountability mechanisms. The work of rebuilding governance after state capture is far from complete, but last week showed we’re finally moving in the right direction.



