New Arms-Deal Pressure on Mbeki |
Publication | Mail and Guardian |
Date |
2007-01-19 |
Web Link |
Details
of the British Serious Fraud Office (SFO) investigation of BAE Systems published
in the Mail & Guardian last week have placed both the British and
South African governments under renewed pressure over the activities of the
controversial defence company.
On Wednesday the British Guardian
newspaper published information drawn from the M&G story, naming BAE
chief executive Mike Turner and other senior company figures suspected of
corruption by the SFO.
The disclosures added to a storm of controversy
raging in Britain about British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s decision to
terminate the SFO investigation of alleged bribes paid by BAE to Saudi officials
to secure a multibillion-pound aircraft order during the 1980s.
The
decision to halt the Saudi leg of the BAE investigation has led the SFO --
angered by Blair’s move to block the Saudi probe -- to increase its focus on suspected corruption in the South African
deal.
The investigation into South African deals began over two
years ago, when it emerged that a secret BAE front company,
Red Diamond Trading, central to the routing of sweeteners paid to the
Saudis, had also been used to pay commissions on the South
African deal.
The M&G reported last week that the SFO
investigation had revealed that a total of more than R1-billion had been paid to
eight different entities in relation to the South Africa deal. This information
was drawn from a request for legal assistance sent by the SFO to the South
African justice department more than six months ago, and which was seen by the
M&G.
The SFO request said the system of paying so-called
commissions was maintained by BAE in conditions of such secrecy “that there is a
legitimate suspicion concerning the real purpose of the payments.”
The
M&G revelations led to questions being put to President Thabo Mbeki
during a television interview broadcast by the SABC this week. Mbeki defended
the deal, as he has done repeatedly in the past, claiming that the process of
granting the arms deal contracts was “not affected by any corruption …That conclusion will stand whatever investigation the British are
doing *1,” he told interviewer Tim Modise.
Asked about the SFO
investigation, Mbeki told Modise: “I have heard about this but as far as I know
the British government haven’t raised this with us.” However, the National
Prosecuting Authority last week publicly confirmed receiving the SFO’s request
for assistance.
The request, first tabled in June 2006, asked for help in
probing the flow of funds to and through the bank accounts of South African
entities linked to the deal.
Mbeki’s rejection of
allegations of corruption in the SA deal may back-fire.
It is
understood that NPA national director Vusi Pikoli is yet to be briefed on the
SFO request and the information contained in it.
The SFO document sets
out its case against BAE in relation to the South African deal in considerable
detail, running to some 100 pages. Pikoli may be forced to re-look at the Scorpions own dormant investigation of the
BAE part of the arms deal.
Former Scorpions lead investigator Gerda Ferreira, who resigned in mid-2003, is known to have
submitted a progress report to Pikoli’s predecessor, Bulelani Ngcuka,
recommending that the criminal probe into aspects of the BAE
deal be pursued actively.
Ngcuka, however, chose to shelve the BAE leg of the probe while resources were devoted *2
to the prosecution of Schabir Shaik. Now that decision may have to be
reviewed.
The M&G also understands that new allegations concerning the contracts with German companies to
purchase ships and submarines are set to emerge in the German media.
Meanwhile, Blair also faces an investigation by the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) of his decision to block the Saudi
probe.
Blair ordered the SFO to shut down the Saudi leg of the BAE probe
in December, citing a threat to British security interests should the Saudi
government decide to halt intelligence cooperation over
terrorism.
However many commentators suggested that the real reason for
shutting down the probe is that the Saudis had threatened to pull out of a
multibillion-pound follow-up deal to buy the Typhoon euro-fighter from
BAE.
Blair was also embarrassed when it emerged that the head of MI6, Britain’s foreign intelligence agency, refused to
endorse the prime minister’s claims that the Saudis were contemplating a
rupture in intelligence cooperation between the two countries.
Britain is
a signatory to the OECD anti-bribery convention and the British government was
hauled before an OECD hearing this week to explain Blair’s decision, which may
have violated treaty obligations. Indications are
that the organisation will recommend an in-depth
investigation.
With acknowledgement to the Mail & Guardian.