Thank you very much, hon Shiceka. May I, just out of sheer courtesy and respect for the labour courts and everything, not discuss the details of this particular case because if I do, I would really be putting myself into trouble? So I would rather not. I do, however, want to say that the ways in which cases are handled sometimes are different. Each case is seen and handled differently from others.
Secondly, when we talk of whistle-blowers - I am not referring to this particular case at all - you have to weigh up whether this really is a whistle-blower or a person who is just bent on mischief. Again, you have to weigh up these things. As executive authority, surely, when it is presented to me, after having listened to the case and to everybody, I am able to make a decision and say: Let the process continue or let's stop the process right here and be able to wrap up this whole thing and see what we can do.
I am not particularly talking about this one case. At the end of the day we've got to make sure that there is closure in everything that we handle. It does not have to go on and on. We close it at a given stage and turn over a new leaf, all of us, to make sure that government's work and policies are pushed forward. If we are going to be bogged down by one individual case, we won't be doing justice to the electorate who voted us into government.