ANC president Cyril Ramaphosa defended the practice of sending cadres.
The ANC met the Constitutional Court's deadline of 5pm on Monday and handed over its executive dispatch records to the Democratic Alliance.
DA MP Leon Schreiber said in a statement that his party was reviewing the document.
“After three years of legal battles, the ANC was forced to surrender before the Public Prosecution Service. For the first time in 30 years, we have succeeded in breaking through the veil of secrecy within the ANC leadership. The Public Prosecution Service has examined the documents. “We plan to open it to the public as soon as possible,” he said.
The DA expects the record to detail internal ANC discussions about the placement of key figures in the three branches of government that led to the state capture.
The official opposition party is particularly interested in President Cyril Ramaphosa's cadre deployment record during his time as ANC deployment committee chairman.
Chief Justice Raymond Zondo's state capture report found that Mr Ramaphosa did not honestly explain the role of the ANC Development Committee in recommending judicial appointments.
Minutes subpoenaed by the committee showed that the committee had made recommendations and expressed preferences regarding the judges.
The Zondo report found that the commission has broad powers and makes decisions on “recommendations” for ministers, government departments, Chapter 9 bodies and heads and directors-general of state-owned entities. revealed.
Shriver said the handing over of the records is a victory for transparency and the rule of law. He added that records must include complete meeting minutes, email communications, WhatsApp conversations, resumes, and all other relevant documents dating back to January 2013.
“If the ANC erases or manipulates some information, or otherwise attempts to override a Constitutional Court order, the DA will seek further legal action to hold ANC leaders personally accountable,” he said. We will start taking measures.”
“Once we have processed the vast archive of documents, the DA will carry out its longstanding mission of exposing the secrets of the ANC's dirty leadership for all South Africans to see.”
Mr Schreiber said the DA's victory was another important milestone in South Africa's efforts to combat agency corruption.
“The deployment of ANC cadres laid the foundations for state capture, systemic corruption and the collapse of service delivery that led to load shedding, water cuts and the accelerated collapse of the state,” he said.
ANC spokesperson Mahlengi Bhengu-Motsiri said the ruling party “continues to respect the constitution and laws of the republic”.
“The rule of law is a cornerstone of the national democratic society that we seek to build in partnership with all South Africans,” she said.
“In pursuit of a united, non-racial, non-sexist, democratic and prosperous society, the ANC continues to implement its cadre development policy and deployment strategy, ensuring that highly qualified, experienced and qualified personnel We will ensure that we are put in place to build a better society for all South African lives. ”