Publication: The Star
Issued:
Date: 2008-07-25
Reporter: Karyn Maughan
Publication |
The Star
|
Date |
2008-07-25
|
Reporter |
Karyn Maughan |
Web Link
|
www.thestar.co.za
|
NEC task team questions Mbeki in explosive report
In an explosive report by an ANC task team, President Thabo Mbeki has come
under fire for his role in South Africa's controversial arms deal.
But advisers to an ANC national executive committee (NEC) arms deal task team
have been far less harsh on ANC president Jacob Zuma, with some
suggesting he should be given amnesty for his
alleged arms deal corruption offences.
The task team, headed by party deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe, was appointed
to probe how the arms deal affected Zuma.
It is being assisted by a team of advisers that include Judge Willem Heath and
University of Venda vice-chancellor Professor Muxe Nkondo.
Now, in a working document that has not been adopted by the NEC and is
understood to have no official status within the ANC, these advisers have
questioned Mbeki "seriously compromising secret meetings"
with the French arms company accused of bribing Zuma.
They also cast doubt on Mbeki's claims that he could not
remember whether he had met the company, Thomson CSF (now Thales/Thint).
Thomson was awarded a R1,3-billion stake in the deal a week after Mbeki held an
alleged secret meeting with its representatives.
A 17-page NEC working document obtained by The Star, which attacks the state's
corruption case against Zuma, states: "Mbeki should
disclose in detail the contents of his discussions with the different
role-players in (Thomson CSF) as well as details of the role played by
Barbara Masekela, South Africa's ambassador to France."
While Mbeki has told parliament he "does not recall" the alleged December 17
1998 with Thomson CSF, Masekela earlier this year publicly confirmed for the
first time that she had arranged a meeting between Mbeki and the arms company.
At the time of the meeting, Mbeki, then deputy president, was the chairperson of
the interdepartmental committee overseeing the arms deal.
According to the working document, "a denial by Mbeki
that such meetings took place at a pretext of memory loss
should not be accepted, as there is substantial evidence in the public domain
which would refute such denials".
The working documents said a copy of an effusive December 18 1998 letter
addressed to Mbeki by Thomson/Thales vice-president Bernard de Bollardiere,
thanking Mbeki for granting him and his colleagues an audience, "must be
obtained". It further stated that the implication of the letter was that Mbeki
"was in fact promoting the interests of the French
company" *1.
Mbeki's spokesperson, Mukoni Ratshitanga, yesterday told The Star he "did not
know anything" about the working document.
It also includes a report by Nkondo entitled "The Jacob Zuma Case: A Call for
Pragmatism", in which the professor outlines how a "political solution" to the
Zuma case - specifically amnesty for his alleged corruption - could be realised.
Nkondo argued that:
"He would be required to admit guilt and disclose all the facts."
"Equally imperative, everybody else implicated in the case
would have to admit guilt and disclose all the facts. Because this is a
very delicate and vulnerable undertaking, a
legitimate but sympathetic agency has to be identified to mediate the process."
"Evidence has to be produced to prove that his alleged crime is part of crimes
committed on all sides during the period of sedition."
"A public agency has to be identified that would establish or declare amnesty."
He added that the ANC should seek support for Zuma's amnesty from, among others,
a "faith-based organisation", "sympathetic political organisations and
governments who have gone through similar crises", friends of the ANC and youth
organisations.
With acknowledgements to Karyn Maughan and The Star.
Well, well , well.
*1 8 years later even the great ANC believes my "complex
theory"*2
This is in effect precisely the basis of my testimony at the Public Protector's
hearings during the Pubic Phase of the joint investigation into the Arms Deal.
*2 Pierre Moynot's description of my Aide Memoire outlining
my allegations *3.
*3 All now more-or-less proven to be true, or substantially
true or plausibly true (and without the benefit of discovery).
The only think is that back then in August 2001 I did not know the full extent
of Mbeki's treachery *4, which was put into practice by the likes of Chippy
Shaik (Department of Defence), Vice Admiral Robert Clause Simpson-Anderson, Rear
Admiral Andrew Chubby Howell, Real Admiral (Junior Grade) Jonathan Edwin Gold
Kamerman (SA Navy) , Llew Swan and Fits Nortje (Armscor).
*4 Which became known in 2006.