Thabo Mbeki's brother and the arms deal |
Publication |
Mail & Guardian |
Date | 2002-03-31 |
Reporter |
SAPA, Staff Reporter |
Web link | www.mg.co.za |
Reports that President Thabo Mbeki’s brother was
benefiting from the arms deal had raised
questions of serious conflicts of interest, the
Democratic Alliance said on Tuesday.
The party’s representative on South Africa’s
controversial arms deal, Raenette Taljaard, said
recent “revelations” suggested that a business
venture by Moeletsi Mbeki and former Independent
Development Corporation (IDC) chairman Diliza
Mji stood to benefit handsomely from the
Corvette gearbox deal.
Her comments follow the announcement on Tuesday
that black empowerment company Dynamic Global
Defence Technologies (DGDT) had obtained a 25%
stake in the South African armoured vehicle
business of the British company Vickers Defence
Systems.
The local Vickers subsidiary is called Vickers
OMC.
DGDT chairman Mji, and Vickers Defence Systems’
chief executive, Archie Hughes, signed the
R25-million partnership deal in Pretoria on
Tuesday.
The British company is part of Rolls-Royce plc.
Taljaard said: “Revelations that Mbeki and Mji
have acquired a 25% stake via DGDT in Vickers
OMC, where Chippy Shaik played an instrumental
role in dropping Maag for Vickers, add fuel to
the fire of conflicts of interest.”
The shareholders of DGDT are KMM Investment
(Pty) Ltd, an investment holding company jointly
owned by Mbeki and Khapametsi Maleke, and
Goldenwood Investments (Pty) Ltd which belongs
to Mji.
Mji said the deal was a milestone in black
empowerment in South Africa. The deal with DGDT
was the fulfilment of a black empowerment
undertaking made by Vickers Defence Systems when
it acquired from Reunert what was then called
Reumech OMC in 1999.
However, Taljaard claimed that in September 2001
Mji had used a R22,5-million IDC loan to fund
his own business interests in the defence
industry.
“The DA is deeply concerned at the
flagrant use of
taxpayers money to fund personal gain for
those well-connected to the ruling elite”.
Taljaard said Shaik tasked a senior Armscor
official to write to the German Frigate
Consortium to inform it of the importance of the
Reumech Gear Ratio to Armscor and the Department
of Defence.
“With the President’s brother now personally
benefiting from the controversial Strategic
Defence Procurement, courtesy of Shaik’s
intervention, questions about Shaik
resurface—did Shaik act as an agent for the
well-connected in the arms deal? If so, whose
agent was he? Why is
Mr. Shaik being extensively protected and
why has no evidence been found against him?”
Taljaard said Mji had further potential conflict
of interest and ethical explaining to do.
With
acknowledgement to Sapa and Mail & Guardian.
Is Chippy Shaik a
member of the ANC?
I absolutely sure he was then back in 1998 to
2001, but he could well be a member of COPE by
now.
I wonder whether Moeletsi Mbeki was a member of
the ANC?
I absolutely sure he was then back in 1998 to
2001, but he is probably a member of COPE by
now.
I absolutely sure Diliza Mji was a member of
the ANC - because he was its Treasurer in the
province of kwaZulu-Natal.
Of course, Judge Willie Seriti would care not to
know any of this.