Cape Argus

‘Top cops quashed probe into plot’

- Siyabonga Sesant and Noloyiso Mtembu

THE man who investigat­ed an alleged plot to assassinat­e former president Nelson Mandela at his 1994 inaugurati­on, told the Western Cape High Court the probe was deliberate­ly quashed by top police officers, even after the weapon that would have apparently been used to murder Madiba was found.

Today will be Major-General Andre Lincoln’s second day on the stand in his multimilli­on-rand civil lawsuit that is set to reveal alleged roles former presidents, high-ranking politician­s and gangsters played in what Lincoln

calls a “malicious prosecutio­n” against him. Lincoln headed the presidenti­al investigat­ion task unit which was set up by Mandela in 1996.

He is suing the then minister of safety and security and the minister of justice and constituti­onal developmen­t for R15 million in damages. Lincoln was sentenced to nine years in prison after he was found guilty on 17 of the 47 counts of fraud against him at the time. He was eventually granted leave to appeal by Judge Jeannette Traverso and was later exonerated.

Last year, Lincoln approached the court to force the ministers to compensate him for damages suffered when he was convicted and lost his job.

However, the ministers have raised a special plea denying liability and capacity to be sued as defendants in the matter. In court papers, Lincoln said he was mandated by Mandela to probe alleged irregular conduct of senior police officers in the province.

The task team had to investigat­e the activities of Vito Palazzolo, an alleged Italian Mafia boss living in the province at the time and now jailed in Italy. Part of Mandela’s instructio­n to then national police commission­er George Fivaz was that Lincoln, a former undergroun­d ANC operative, would report directly to the president with no interferen­ce from top management of the police.

However, Lincoln claims in court papers, provincial police top brass tried to sabotage the investigat­ion and Fivaz, in turn, ordered a “malicious prosecutio­n” against him.

Part of the evidence likely to be put before the court relates to a probe into a covert police operation, Project Donna, involving the printing of counterfei­t money and how informatio­n about this was provided to then minister of safety and security Sydney Mufamadi, and then deputy president Thabo Mbeki.

Some of the officers involved in this “project” were said to have been linked to a plot to assassinat­e Mandela at his inaugurati­on at the Union Buildings in Pretoria in 1994.

The case continues.

 ??  ?? SPEAKS OUT: Andre Lincoln
SPEAKS OUT: Andre Lincoln

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