Criminal case against former PRASA director kicked down the tracks – again
Mthuthuzeli Swartz was arrested for the sale of 42km of railway line in January 2019
- Former PRASA acting CEO Mthuthuzeli Swartz was charged in relation to the theft of over 40km of railway line in 2019.
- The latest hearing in his case and that of Cape Town businessman Syed Mohiudeen took place on Thursday in the Gqeberha Regional Court.
- But it was once more postponed, to 1 December.
- Neither of the accused showed up to court, but the magistrate said she was unable to issue a warrant of arrest as she could not read the handwritten records on the court file indicating whether a warrant had previously been issued.
The case against former PRASA acting CEO Mthuthuzeli Swartz, who, together with Cape Town businessman Syed Mohiudeen, stands accused of selling 42km of railway line in the Eastern Cape, was again postponed in the Gqeberha Regional Court on Thursday.
The case, ongoing for more than four years since Swartz and Mohiudeen were arrested and charged in early 2019, has seen numerous postponements, the last one on 14 August. The postponements have been due to a review application in the Eastern Cape High Court, filed in February this year, in which Mohiudeen is seeking further details of the charges against him.
The charges are that Mohiudeen and Swartz sold the disused railway line between Sterkstroom and Maclear in the Eastern Cape to cousins Adrian and Cedric Samuels of Cape Town in 2012. It is alleged the cousins paid a deposit of R1.5-million to Mohiudeen’s company, Spanish Ice, for the steel, 25,000 tons of which was allegedly already available, being held in storage at the Metrorail yard in Woodstock. At the time, Swartz was Metrorail Western Cape Regional Manager.
Prior to the charges, but while under investigation, he was appointed as PRASA acting CEO on 1 January 2018.
Neither Swartz nor Mohiudeen were present at the Gqeberha Regional Court on Thursday, and both lawyers representing the state and Swartz, were stand-ins. No representative for Mohiudeen was present and attorney Julian Lindoor, representing Swartz as a stand-in for advocate Mzwamadoda Mnyani, told Magistrate Essie Mkhari there had been no correspondence from Mohiudeen’s attorney.
Lindoor told the magistrate that the case had been postponed “on three or four occasions” due to Mohiudeen’s review before the High Court after the previous magistrate, Nolitha Bara, refused further particulars of the charges be provided to Mohiudeen.
Lindoor asked the court to issue warrants of arrest, but to hold Swartz’s warrant over until the next court appearance.
But the magistrate said she was not able to issue a warrant, as she was unable to read the handwritten records on the court file indicating whether a warrant had previously been issued.
However, she said a warrant against Mohiudeen appeared to have been stayed.
Prosecuting attorney Maryke Kruger, standing in for Gerrit van der Merwe, was also unable to read the record.
The magistrate said the issue of warrants and bail money would be held over until the next court date, 1 December.
When GroundUp asked Kruger for further information on the matter of bail money, and whether it had been paid, Kruger said she did not know as she was not familiar with the case.
Next: Over 100 grannies march in Durban to demand better healthcare and housing
Previous: Life-saving TB drug is now cheaper in South Africa, but not as cheap as it can be
© 2023 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.
We put an invisible pixel in the article so that we can count traffic to republishers. All analytics tools are solely on our servers. We do not give our logs to any third party. Logs are deleted after two weeks. We do not use any IP address identifying information except to count regional traffic. We are solely interested in counting hits, not tracking users. If you republish, please do not delete the invisible pixel.