The Independent Police Investigative
Directorate (IPID) will establish if National Police Commissioner Riah Phiyega
told her Western Cape police boss his links to a local businessman were being
looked into.
“We will conduct an independent and
impartial investigation,” the watchdog’s acting executive director Koekie Mbeki
said in a statement.
Phiyega said she welcomed the probe,
and “still maintains that she committed no crime,” according to a police
statement.
Amid allegations of a smear campaign, national
police spokesman Solomon Makgale told AFP that the Western Cape police boss,
Arno Lamoer, was aware of the inquiry into his activities because he asked for
it in order to clear his name.
Faced with calls from critics for
Phiyega to be sacked, Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa called for patience from
the public to allow time for the probe to be completed.
“It is important to allow IPID an
opportunity to do their work without undue interference,” he said in a
statement.
Phiyega is the first woman to head
South Africa’s deeply troubled force.
She was appointed in June last year,
with no previous police experience, but with management experience that was
expected to help rejuvenate the force.
Two of her immediate predecessors left
the job dogged by allegations of graft.
But under her watch, the 198,000-strong
force has been battered by crisis after crisis.
It was pilloried for shooting dead 34
striking miners last August.
Vanguard

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