CT goes to court on commission
2008-04-08 18:07
Cape Town - The city has launched a High Court challenge to the legality of the Erasmus Commission, announced city speaker Dirk Smit on Tuesday.
The commission was set up by Western Cape Premier Ebrahim Rasool last year to probe the city's own investigation of renegade councillor Badih Chaaban.
It has since been given a make-over, and Rasool has added a probe of Chaaban himself, and of the Democratic Alliance-controlled George town council, to its brief.
Smit said the city's papers filed on Tuesday in the Cape High Court challenged the legality of the commission both before and after the make-over.
"In his enthusiasm to smear the multiparty government of Cape Town, Rasool has tried to take on powers he does not have," said Smit.
"He has stepped over the line, and is trying to abuse and distort the province's very limited powers of intervention in local government for party political purposes."
'Acting outside the act'
Rasool's African National Congress controls the province, while the city is run by a multiparty government led by the Democratic Alliance.
Smit said the city was arguing that by acting outside the Municipal Systems Act, Rasool was trying to dodge legal constraints on what the province could and could not do when intervening in local government.
"This is an unlawful abuse of his office," he said.
He said if Rasool suspected that corruption or any other criminal offence had been committed, he should report the matter to the police and leave them to investigate it.
In addition, the commission could not result in any administrative action by the province, which was a requirement of law.
"This is not the first time that the province has tried to unlawfully undermine the city," said Smit.
- SAPA