Mail & Guardian

KZN hits linked to taxi boss

Links between the taxi industry and political killings in KZN are being investigat­ed

- Athandiwe Saba & Govan Whittles

With political assassinat­ions stacking up, police special units are zoning in on a KwaZuluNat­al taxi boss and ward councillor as the orchestrat­or of the killings.

Until now, the many political assassinat­ions countrywid­e, and particular­ly in KZN, have seemed unrelated.

Dennis “Boy” Shozi, the ANC ward councillor of Inchanga who owns a fleet of taxis, is being investigat­ed for his role in a bloody shootout in January, and possibly other killings, a source close to the special task team’s investigat­ion into politicall­y motivated killings in the province told the Mail & Guardian.

In January Phillip Dlamini (68) was shot and killed and four other South African Communist Party (SACP) members were wounded at a meeting at the Kandokweni Sports Ground in Inchanga. Young Communist League members alleged at the time that Shozi was part of the squad responsibl­e for the murders.

The task team is looking into any connection­s Shozi may have to other politicall­y connected murders in the area, the source said.

In June, three ANC members were gunned down in Imbali, outside Pietermari­tzburg, in separate incidents.

“He [Shozi] has the network and the history in this area to be asked to provide iinkabi [assassins] for other people to do the hits. We need to find the link because he seems to be in the centre of all this,” said a member of police intelligen­ce investigat­ing the political killings. (See “Sharp rise in pre-election deaths”)

At least six people in the Inchanga have been killed in alleged political assassinat­ions since the beginning of the year.

In 2007, Shozi was investigat­ed for his role in taxi violence in the Inchanga area. The police intelligen­ce source said he was worried that the current investigat­ion could hit a dead end, just as the previous one had.

On Wednesday, Minister of Police Nkosinathi Nhleko said collusion between taxi bosses and politician­s to orchestrat­e killings is considered so serious that the police’s task team has roped in 11 members of a unit that looked into taxi violence.

“In most of these particular

“In Zulu culture, cattle play a huge rule in formulatin­g language, such as metaphors. So, an inkabi is very young bull, not yet castrated, [it is] very strong and it can fight. It is a bull that has strength and agility. So it’s a metaphor, when you say to a person: ‘You are a hitman.’ ” incidents, we will find that there are hitmen who are being used. Some of them are operating in the taxi industry,” the minister said.

Shozi has a long history in the taxi business. He confirmed that his family has been in the taxi business for many years.

“This has been a family business for a long time but it has nothing to do with politics. Just because we have a taxi family business that doesn’t mean we are connected to the killings. My business has nothing to do with politics and the ANC,” he said.

When asked about Shozi’s possible involvemen­t in political killings in KwaZulu-Natal, police task team spokespers­on Hangwani Mulaudzi said he would not comment on rumours.

Shozi is running as a proportion­al representa­tive candidate in Ward 4 of Inchanga.

Themba Mthembu, the South African Communist Party’s secretary in the province who is assisting the task team, confirmed that tensions in Inchanga are fuelled by political and taxi violence.

“We cannot say with confidence that he [Shozi] is involved in the political killings, but there has always been a common denominato­r, where there is serious conflict between SACP and ANC, and that is him. We have heard that hitmen are for hire in Inchanga,” he says.

But Shozi, who has been a councillor in the area since 2000, has denied that there has ever been taxi violence in the area, claiming people who want political clout have fabricated allegation­s against him.

“People want to fulfil their own political ambitions. I have been a leader here for a long time. The police have not contacted me in any way but all I know is that there have been people who have been arrested. But besides that I know nothing,” he says.

He admitted that at least two of those arrested for the January shooting, Buka Shozi (44) and Zamokwakhe Shozi (38), are family members.

“I cannot speak to them about what happened because it is before the court,” he says. “But that still doesn’t show I’m involved in any way.”

According to the task team’s report, seven suspects were arrested, two of whom were subsequent­ly released or have had charges against them withdrawn.

Though Shozi denies there has ever been taxi violence in his area or that he was investigat­ed in 2007 when violence gripped the province, particular­ly in Inchanga, former MEC for safety Bheki Cele said the area has always been susceptibl­e to taxi violence that cannot easily be separated from politics.

“When there was violence during mid-2000s, Inchanga was one of those places that flared up the worst. Even as far back as the mid to late 1990s Inchanga was in the middle of it all. But as far as I know, it was all political violence and I don’t know much about the taxi violence of the time,” says Cele.

The former police minister said he knows of Shozi but would not comment on police-related matters.

“I would not agree that Boy has iinkabi or that he is one himself. Yes, there was political violence in 2007 and Boy would have been one of the … I don’t know whether they ended up in court or not,” he says, adding that there was much violence in the Inchanga area at the time and that there was a crossover between taxi and political violence.

“I would not give that to Boy as being a hitman or having hitmen in the taxi industry but [to] violent politics, maybe,” he says.

SACP’s Mthembu says there has always been the suspicion of a connection between political tensions and taxi violence.

“Very interestin­g to note that most of the people who are seen to be at the centre of agitating conflict, between [the] ANC and SACP, are also involved in the taxi industry,” says Mthembu.

Senior ANC leaders in the province were not available to answer questions regarding the allegation­s against Shozi.

Mdumiseni Ntuli, the ANC’s spokespers­on in KwaZulu-Natal, said the party is not aware of confirmed links between the taxi industry and political killings.

He a l s o d e n i e d a n y k n o w l - edge of Shozi being placed under surveillan­ce.

 ?? Photo: Rajesh Jantilal ?? Iinkabi: Taxi boss and ward councillor ‘Boy’ Shozi (below) is being fingered by the police as the missing link in a hit in January. In a separate incident, ANC candidate Khanyisile Ngobese-Sibisiwas (above) shot on July 18, allegedly in a political...
Photo: Rajesh Jantilal Iinkabi: Taxi boss and ward councillor ‘Boy’ Shozi (below) is being fingered by the police as the missing link in a hit in January. In a separate incident, ANC candidate Khanyisile Ngobese-Sibisiwas (above) shot on July 18, allegedly in a political...
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