Master of Information |
Publication | Mail and Guardian |
Date |
2008-09-12 |
Reporter | Sam Sole, Stefaans Brümmer |
Bheki Jacobs, who died on Monday at the age of 46, was one
of the most remarkable figures to come out of the liberation struggle.
Jacobs was the native who caused all the trouble, the man ultimately responsible
for the fact that we have an arms deal scandal and the crisis around ANC
president Jacob Zuma.
It was Jacobs who delivered the dossier of arms deal allegations to opposition
MP Patricia de Lille, though he was not its only author. It was this information
that helped launch the investigation that came to focus on Zuma and his
financial adviser Schabir Shaik.
Information its gathering, interpretation and dissemination was Jacobs's
life-blood, a craft he pursued brilliantly and ceaselessly,
even when he was partly paralysed by the cancer that killed him.
At his Muslim funeral on Monday, veteran investigative journalist Martin Welz
spoke of Jacobs as a man of rare integrity. That was true: for an intelligence
operator an "information peddler" he had a remarkably constant code of
honour.
Jacobs ran what he called a guerrilla intelligence network (a concept that
formed the subject of his uncompleted thesis at Moscow University's Institute
for Asian and African Studies). Styled as a company, Congress Consultants, it
ran on a shoestring. Key among its clients, Jacobs suggested, was "the chief":
Thabo Mbeki. The presidency has denied a relationship with Jacobs.
After his return from exile in 1994 Jacobs worked for a series of fronts that
provided him with a salary and a cover for his political intelligence-gathering:
first at ANC head-quarters, later as a security adviser to then-ANC chief whip
Arnold Stofile and from 1999 to 2001 for the state-funded Africa Institute.
His long-time collaborator, Sobantu Xayiya, said they produced regular
intelligence reports, mainly delivered through the office of Mbeki confidant
Essop Pahad. Xayiya claimed their last meeting with Pahad was in November 1998,
when Pahad accused them of "misinforming" the president and cut off their access
to Mbeki.
The reason for the fallout seems to have been the arms
deal.
Peace campaigner Terry Crawford-Browne said Jacobs approached him in June
1999. "He told me: 'We'll tell you where the real corruption is around Joe
Modise and the leadership of Umkhonto weSizwe, who see themselves as the new
financial elite in post-apartheid South Africa.'
"He and his colleagues in ANC intelligence, he said, had seen the disastrous
consequences in Russia of the collapse of the Soviet Union, when communists
suddenly became super-capitalists. Such a gangster society, Bheki said, was not
why he had gone into exile to fight for liberation from apartheid. Something had
to be done."
What Jacobs did was to craft relations with members of the opposition, media and
civil society, beginning with the dossier for release by De Lille. His approach
to information had become radically democratic: to share it as widely as
possible.
Arms deal bidder-turned-whistleblower Richard Young said
Jacobs subsequently played a crucial role by revealing and sharing documentary
evidence on the arms deal. This put Young, and ultimately investigating
authorities, in a position to make allegations that are now facing the test in
Zuma's prosecution. "But Bheki's focus was certainly not Zuma only he was
interested in the full spectrum," Young said.
Indeed, Jacobs had a complex relationship with his alleged masters in the
Mbeki camp. His code of honour did not exclude disclosing information damaging
or plain inconvenient to Mbeki or his allies. The full story of his hand in
post-arms deal media scoops remains to be told.
There were attempts to discredit him. In a front page Sunday Times story in
2001, media "Mata Hari" Ranjeni Munusamy suggested Jacobs was some kind of nut
who had duped government officials with bogus intelligence reports.
At the height of the Zuma-Mbeki proxy battle that was the 2003 Hefer Commission,
Jacobs was suspected of being the writer of a document that made damaging claims
about Zuma and his allies. He was arrested and flown to Pretoria, apparently on
the instigation of Mo Shaik. All charges were later dropped.
"He was a genius, but he couldn't work within an
organisation *1," Shaik said this week.
Jacobs's comrades insist he blew the whistle on the arms deal because of a deep
frustration that the ANC was betraying its most sacred principles. In this, as
in much else, it seems he has been proved right. Sam Sole and Stefaans Brümmer
With acknowledgements to Sam Sole, Stefaans Brümmer and Mail and Guardian.