De Lille Hands Over Arms Deal Info |
Publication | Business Day |
Date | 2001-02-07 |
Reporter | INet Bridge |
Web Link |
Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) MP Patricia de Lille on Tuesday night said she had handed over information requested by President Thabo Mbeki on the government's controversial R43bn arms deal.
She told the
Johannesburg Press Club that she had handed the information to the Investigating
Directorate: Serious Economic Offences on Monday.
De Lille said the
information excluded evidence from those people who had earlier given
information but since withdrawn it.
Meanwhile, she said
she had still not been furnished with all the information Mbeki had used to
decide on the Heath special investigating unit's exclusion from the arms probe.
De Lille said that on
Friday she had received 35 pages of about the 55 she was supposed to be
furnished with and by Tuesday evening had not received the remainder of the
pages.
Last week Thursday, De
Lille gave Mbeki until Friday (February 2) to provide her with all the
information. De Lille's lawyers had indicated if the president failed to do so,
they would be forced to go to court to compel him to hand over the information.
The lawyers want the
information to asses whether Mbeki applied his mind to the decision to exclude
Heath from the investigation. If Mbeki is found not to have done so, De Lille
will seek a judicial review of the decision.
De Lille said on
Tuesday that she had hoped to announce whether a judicial review would be sought
or not, but was not able to do so because she had not received all the
information from Mbeki yet.
She said her lawyers
would take the matter up with the president's office on Wednesday.
"We have sent
four letters since Friday trying to find the missing pages," De Lille said.
"Where there is smoke there must be fire."
She said it was time
that the matter moved away from "statements and counter-statements" to
the actual investigation.
De Lille, who
described the arms probe as a 10-round boxing match, told the Press Club that
she had won the first five rounds but Mbeki had won the sixth round when he
announced on January 19 that Heath's unit would be excluded from the probe.
She said rounds seven,
eight, nine and 10 would be fought in the public, media and courts.
The "full
story" would come out in these rounds as there could be no secrecy and
cover-ups in the courts, De Lille said.
"I still have
confidence in the judiciary."
On government's
projection that the arms deal would provide about 65 000 jobs, De Lille said
that she was concerned because the arms industry was highly-skilled and this
would not make an impact on SA's high number of unskilled workers.
She said the deal was
not necessary as SA had more arms than the rest of the Southern African
Development Community members put together.
De Lille said she was
worried that the deal would end up being a competition between African countries
to get more arms and this would create a "toys for boys" mindset.
"I believe we
need an army to control and guard our coastline but we must look at all the
priorities first before we buy toys.
"The need is not
to buy more arms but address poverty," she said to a round of applause.
With acknowledgement to INet Bridge and Business Day.