High court not convinced of Selebi's mysterious sickness
Jackie Selebi's defence team failed this morning to convince the registrar of the Johannesburg High Court that the disgraced former police chief is too sick to go to jail. The court has dispatched an investigating officer with a warrant of arrest to the Jacaranda Hospital, Pretoria, where he is recuperating after collapsing on Friday.
The convicted former national police commissioner, who is out on bail of R20000, was to have reported to Johannesburg prison at 10am yesterday to begin his 15-year sentence for corruption, but failed to do so.
His defence team, husband and wife, advocate Fanus Coetzee and attorney Wynanda, failed to convince chief registrar of the Johannesburg High court, Viven Pather to extend or amend Selebi's bail condition.
"We will follow normal procedure which will involve sending an investigating officer to hospital to investigate Selebi's condition. The IO (investigating officer)Â is going to the hospital with a warrant of arrest to satisfy himself of Selebi's medical condition. Based on his findings I will make a ruling," said Pather.
He said should the Investigating officer not be satisfied that Selebi is too sick to be incarcerated, he will be removed from the Jacaranda Hospital and placed in a prison medical facility.
Selebi's defence presented a medical certificate proving that Selebi is sick, but refused to divulge the nature of his sickness, apparently following instructions by the family not to do so.
"We are hoping that correctional services deals sympathetically with the case," said the Coetzees.
The former chief of international policing agency Interpol collapsed after the Supreme Court of Appeals dismissed his appeal against his conviction and sentence. He was given 48 hours in which to report to prison, which expired at 10am yesterday.
Selebi's lawyer, Wynanda Coetzee, said yesterday that she would ask the registrar for a bail extension.
But she would not confirm reports that Selebi had had a stroke and would need surgery.
"I cannot confirm that it is a stroke. We are waiting to get a report from his permanent specialist," she said.
But Hawks spokesman MacIntosh Polela said on Twitter: "Selebi is not talking coherently and not participating in discussions."
Correctional Services' national commissioner, Tom Monyane, said: "We have to be considerate about this. We cannot incarcerate someone who is unwell."
He said his department could not arrest people who did not comply with a court order.
"We are not an arresting agent; we are an incarceration agent."
He said the department had not received a written submission from Selebi's lawyers or his family.
Coetzee said Selebi's family was distressed by the Appeals Court verdict.
"The family is very stressed, especially his wife, Anne, but they are all worried about his medical condition," said Coetzee.
She denied that Selebi's lawyers had asked the Department of Correctional Services for a seven-day extension to allow him to recover in hospital, saying, "That's news to me."
Sipho George Nene, South Africa's permanent representative at the UN in Geneva, visited Selebi yesterday afternoon, accompanied by Selebi's wife.
Two women, who had arrived earlier, were refused permission to see him by hospital authorities acting on the family's instructions.
When Nene left the hospital he refused to talk to reporters at the hospital's gate.
A short time later, a man believed to be Selebi's cousin arrived with other relatives and, on seeing the reporters, muttered in Setswana: "Why can't they leave us alone?"
It was reported yesterday that Selebi had had a stroke which caused him to lose sensation in his left side. It was also reported that he had kidney problems and high blood pressure, and was scheduled to undergo surgery in February.
Selebi was convicted of receiving money and gifts from convicted drug trafficker Glenn Agliotti, who at the time he referred to as "my friend, finish and klaar".
Apart from paying his medical bills, Agliotti gave Selebi R150000 and an unspecified amount in US dollars, and showered him with expensive gifts and designer clothing.
Agliotti had nothing to say about his former friend's impending incarceration .
"I have got no comment for the press, thank you," he said tersely yesterday.
Making matters worse for Selebi was Assets Forfeiture Unit head Willie Hofmeyr, who said yesterday that now that the appeal was over, Selebi would have to hand over the cash Agliotti gave him, an amount now revised up to R230000.
"We obtained a court order last year in July which stated that Selebi had to pay back the money with 15.5% interest from the date on which the order was made," said Hofmeyr.
Justice Department spokesman Tlali Tlali said the department had begun recovering more than R15-million the state had spent on Selebi's legal costs.
"We're treating the matter as a normal debt-recovery process, which will not start off by demanding [that] assets be attached. Let's not get carried away," Tlali said.
The DA's prisons spokeman, James Selfe, was sceptical about Selebi's medical condition, saying: "We trust Selebi will not contract a sudden case of Schabir Shaik-itis and that his current condition is, in fact, genuine."
Selfe said medical parole was now harder to receive after the amendment of the Correctional Services Act.
- Selebi vowed: "These hands are clean" in 2006 following a Sunday Times exposé of the inner workings of mafia-style organisations involving senior policemen.
But Johannesburg High Court judge Meyer Joffe described Selebi as an embarrassment to South Africa and the police in his judgment in August last year.

Join the discussion & Debate
High court not convinced of Selebi's mysterious sickness
For Commenters Consideration | Please stick to the subject matterCOMMENTS [35]
Sabz
Posted 172 days agocould you please be a man e nough and go serve your sentence
regards
Loggenberg
Posted 172 days agoSabz
OTTOOTTO
Posted 172 days agoBruster
Posted 172 days agoDaffy
Posted 172 days agoStefTerblanche
Posted 172 days agoMsLee
JuliusBilal
Posted 172 days agobuddi
Posted 172 days agoOTTOOTTO
Mnbvcxz0
Posted 172 days agoI was sick and the High court was not convinced of my mysterious sickness , I was in prison you did not bring me my Rolex.....Selebi.
I984
Posted 172 days agoThe sooner this farce (like any other farce!) ends - the better.
AMS-Dammer
They have to even "BREAK" just going to jail....
Now he wants to "PETCH IT UP"..... and take a couple more weeks....
To JAIL with your Selebi Ar5e!
ThePurplePimp
Posted 172 days agoMisterWendal
Posted 172 days agoMsLee
Daffy
Posted 172 days agoour legal system allows people to enter a plea bargain, Agllioti saw hw was ging to swing and used his rigt. our top Cop put all his money on Thabo Mbeki getting another term whcih would have menat the investigation would have never gonefurthe... a lesson in risk favours the risk taker!!
MsLee
Posted 172 days agoUltimatum-1
Posted 172 days agoAlready owing the state 17 Million is he still in our hodpital or he is in the private hospital?
To repay this he has to work double shiefts in pison and his cell has to be without switch and light. It would also be great if he eats once a day and all the parcels from his visitors should be distributed to those who killed are there for killing a wit man.LOL
samsam
Posted 172 days ago325i
Posted 172 days agoI984
For your sake I hope you are an E46 - and not E36.
The suggestion you make sounds more like coming from a box-shape though....
the_original_MommaCyndi
Of course they could deem that his medical condition is top secret and then the media will not be allowed to report on his golf outings with the zombie known as Shabir
PSG
Nah he's an E21 :-).
Momma how are you my dear? When last did you hear from BWL?
the_original_MommaCyndi
Haven't heard from the Princess for a while. I must write her an e-mail and see if she is still okay. I'll let you know when I do.
(I am sooooo itching to comment on the DRC riots!)
I984
PSG howzit, I'm okay thanks, enjoying my skinny fries if you catch my drift (sshhh!) :)
the_original_MommaCyndi
If they are that damn concerned about what is happening in the DRC then why aren't they in the DRC instead of stuffing up Joburg?
PSG
We don't need their assistance :-).
I foresee another Kenya power sharing agreement coming to play here.
the_original_MommaCyndi
Yes, we are very good at shouting at Zuma. We've had a lot of practice.
Hi Lady of the Lamp :)
How goes things?
the_original_MommaCyndi
Just limbering up for the naughtiness :)