Was Ché Masilela killed? Angry weapons dealer decides to talk |
Publication |
Daily Maverick |
Date | 2013-02-05 |
Reporter |
De Wet Potgieter |
Web Link | www.dailymaverick.co.za |
January Masilela
Raymond Preston
Explosive new allegations that former
secretary of defence January “Ché” Masilela
and controversial international arms dealer
Ivan Monsieur were assassinated because they
knew too much about the murky world of arms
deals, are made in a wide-ranging affidavit
presented recently to the office of the
national commissioner of police, Riah
Phiyega, by international weapons dealer
Johan Erasmus. Claims of shady deals,
industrial espionage and dirty tricks by
government officials and high-powered
politicians close to the massive South
African defence industry’s armaments
acquisition projects, are made in the
document, writes DE WET POTGIETER.
The battle lines were drawn at the end of
last year when a “small army” of heavily
armed members of the police’s tactical
response unit – the notorious “Amaberets” –
headed by the Hawks, members of the
government’s Crime Against the State (CATS)
unit and a top official from Justice
Minister Jeff Radebe’s National Conventional
Arms Control Committee (NCACC) raided the
home and offices of international weapons
dealer Johan Erasmus. This time, they turned
up only a container of gun oil, but walked
away with piles of documents and electronic
data relating to Erasmus’s international
business dealings.
Erasmus, an international dealer in weapons
of war (including weapons of mass
destruction) does not mince words when he
talks about the
dirty tricks of his trade. He told
the Daily Maverick soon after the raid that
it had been staged in order to destabilise
his business. Erasmus blamed Armscor
officials for attempting to steal his
prospects and secure better contracts for
themselves at arms factories in China.
Behind it all
lies the multi-billion rand refurbishment of
the South African National Defence Force.
January Masilela died a horrific death on
Sunday morning, 24 August 2008. His body was
burnt beyond recognition. Officially, he
died in a car crash shortly after 6:00 on a
freeway off-ramp near Bronkhorstspruit. He
“apparently” lost control of his speeding
BMW X5, which soared over a stream, spun
round, landed in the road and burst into
flames. He managed to get out, but burnt to
death next to his vehicle.
Ten months after Masilela’s fiery death,
assassins dressed as Johannesburg metro
police gunned down international weapons
dealer and police reservist Ivan Monsieur on
a quiet road in Midrand. Monsieur knew too
much, the Daily Maverick was told.
The 56-year-old Belgian-born South African
was the whistleblower who blew the lid off
the multi-billion rand secret export of the
country’s excess weapons arsenal during
Thabo Mbeki’s presidency and Masilela was
instrumental in instituting a damning
forensic investigation into these shady
dealings.
According to police and intelligence
sources, the investigation into Monsieur’s
death was deliberately stalled from high up
in government to conceal the reasons for his
assassination.
Masilela, who had served as secretary of
defence since 1999, was regularly at
loggerheads with senior subordinates and was
also involved in scores of lawsuits against
the military over irregularities in
suppliers’ contracts.
To date, Masilela’s death is still
officially regarded as a simple car crash
and Monsieur’s assassins remain free.
Erasmus’ statement to Phiyega includes
allegations against the director of
compliance of the NCACC, Vanessa du Toit;
the commanding officer of the South African
Special Forces, General Rudzani Maphwanya;
and his senior staff officer, Colonel DB
Smit. Erasmus and Monsieur had convinced
Masilela at the time to institute the
forensic investigation by First Consult into
Armscor’s arms deals.
In his affidavit Erasmus alleges, among
others, that he got to know Du Toit, who was
behind the raid on his premises, a lot
better during the investigation by First
Consult into the issue of the export
of redundant ammunition by Armscor as well
as the export of 320 Ratel infantry fighting
vehicles (IFV) to Jordan.
“The First Consult report was initiated by
Masilela,” Erasmus states in his affidavit.
Me and Ivan Monsieur, who was later
assassinated in June 2009 whence the SAPS
till today has not yet finalised the case,
visited Masilela to complain re the export
of some 70
million rounds of redundant
ammunition by Armscor.”
According to Erasmus, on Masilela’s
instructions this investigation commenced,
along with the investigation into the 320
Ratels, which were exported by for less than
their scrap value.
“In this whole fracas it became very clear
that the minister of defence, Mr Terror
Lekota, had to have something or an interest
in this matter. A Ratel, with all the RSA
Top Secret communications equipment, was
donated on his instruction to the King of
Jordan. We later learned that this Ratel was
gone through with a fine comb in Amman by a
foreign intelligence organisation.”
What transpired later was that the Ratels
were apparently sold at less than their
scrap value (a second-hand Ratel solds for
about R3,4 million and upwards). “According
to the calculations Monsieur and I made at
the time some R600 million, up to more than
R1 billion, was parked offshore. In this
regard Vanessa Du Toit must be held
personally liable for the loss the state had
suffered due to her negligence,” alleges
Erasmus.
He also claims in his affidavit that
Masilela and former president Thabo Mbeki
had obtained a uranium concession from the
president of the Central African Republic
(CAR).
“This concession was sold by Mbeki and
Masilela to a French company within a few
weeks for the equivalent of R2 billion,” he
states. “As a quid pro quo Masilela and
Mbeki had promised armaments from South
Africa to the CAR, which till today has not
yet been delivered. They only managed to
supply one Ratel IFV 90 mm without the
promised 500x90mm rounds. This was also
apparently the reason as to why Masilela
died in a car crash a couple of years ago.”
In April 2010, a judge from the Gauteng
North High Court obtained a statement from a
Mozambican hitman, “Josh”, in which he
claimed that he and another hitman were
hired to kill Masilela and made his death
appear to have resulted from a car accident.
Masilela, who hailed from Mpumalanga had
been part of the old Eastern Transvaal/Lowveld
underground cadre of Umkhonto we Sizwe that
operated under Mathews Phosa in the region.
These revelations emerged when the judge,
seven senior government officials from the
Department of Justice, and two businessmen
met with the hitman at the Nerston border
post between South Africa and Swaziland.
It was reported in the local media at the
time that “Josh” (the name is known in the
underworld), made a 15-page hand-written
confession and also named the high-powered
people who hired him to assassinate Mbombela
municipality speaker Jimmy Mohlala in
January 2009.
(Mohlala was a whistle-blower on the alleged
tender corruption involving the building of
the R2 billion Mbombela Stadium in
Nelspruit. In his confession he claimed to
have been hired by a senior Mpumalanga
politician, a soccer boss and two
businessmen. While soccer boss Bobby Motaung
and two others were arrested and charged by
the Hawks last year in connection with this
tender fraud, nobody has been arrested for
the death of Masilela to date. It’s not
clear if Josh is in the witness protection
programme as a key witness in the Mbombela
trio’s hearing.)
Erasmus this week instructed his lawyers to
calculate his damages and prepare a
multi-million rand civil suit against the
government for what he terms in his
affidavit as “malicious actions
instigated against us by these criminal
elements in my view, populating the state.
We shall therefore visit the aspects of
damages whence the Public Protector will be
requested as to make a finding against all
those parties so mentioned in order to
recover.”
Erasmus’s woes began earlier last year
earlier last year, when two consignments
of weapons – one the new-generation RPG
missiles from Bulgaria, the other a Gatling
mini machine gun from the US – which are
regarded as weapons of mass destruction,
were seized as a potential national threat
because they were suspected to be destined
for use in a Boeremag coup. Now, those
seized arms have been transferred to a less
secure storage unit, a move Erasmus has
questioned, considering they were ostensibly
seized for reasons of national security.
According to Erasmus, the seized armaments
were imported into South Africa because the
SANDF’s Special Forces unit was interested
in acquiring these weapons for its arsenal.
According to his statement, the Bulgarian
weaponry was imported for demonstration
purposes and for testing. South Africa’s
Special Forces (SASF) was the vehicle to be
used for this as “we could have even chosen
SA Infantry should we had wanted to. The
fact of the matter is that the whole Armscor
contract was sabotaged.”
Erasmus said the Dillon Gatling gun had been
on the SASF’s shopping list for the past 20
years. However, in order to have a gun
available for testing it had to be bought
from Dillon. This was a condition set by
Dillon; SASF did not have the money in its
budget and could not pay for it.
“In replying to all the affidavits deposed
to by Vanessa Du Toit, I wish to point out
the following, that the sole aim of her
operation was to sabotage our business,
discredit us in the eyes of the world whilst
blatantly lying. Due to the Hawks being led
by the nose, they willingly followed her
word- despite the fact that they also have
an onus to conduct their own
investigations,” Erasmus alleges in the
affidavit.
Not one of the government departments
implicated in Erasmus’s claims responded to
written requests by the Daily Maverick for a
response.
January “Ché” Masilela’s name will forever
be remembered in Pretoria where once was
Louis Botha Avenue. He was a soldier and a
man many people remember.
But will we ever know for sure why did he
have to die? DM
With acknowledgement to De Wet Potgieter and Daily Maverick.
The dirty tricks of this trade.