Sowetan

Phiyega denies ‘shielding’ Mdluli

‘Hawks wanted me to break informatio­n law’

- By Isaac Mahlangu

Former police commission­er Riah Phiyega has claimed she refused to declassify crucial evidence in the General Richard Mdluli fraud and corruption case because the originals were nowhere to be found.

Phiyega revealed this in an interview with Sowetan as she sought to clear her name following criticism that she may have helped protect the controvers­ial former crime intelligen­ce boss.

Freedom Under Law, an NGO which pursued the charges against Mdluli, said failure to declassify the evidence had helped Mdluli get away scot-free, both at SAPS and in the court of law.

The documents with classified informatio­n contained what many believed to be damning evidence against Mdluli relating to travel expense informatio­n of crime intelligen­ce operatives.

Mdluli was fired by Police Minister Fikile Mbalula last week.

He faced fraud and corruption charges related to the alleged abuse of the police’s crime intelligen­ce division’s slush fund involving sanctionin­g the use of millions of rands for private benefit, including buying luxury cars.

Phiyega said multiple court challenges faced by Mdluli around 2012 and 2013 also ensured he dodged the bullet of an internal inquiry, which saw his co-accused Major-General Solly Lazarus expelled from the police on similar charges.

Mdluli’s fraud and corruption case was struck off the roll over two years ago.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) and the Hawks, in their bid to present evidence in court against Mdluli, failed to get the evidence declassifi­ed by Phiyega.

Phiyega said: “There’s a law that governs how documents are declassifi­ed, the law is called Minimum Informatio­n Security Standards [Miss]... when I was asked to declassify documents, given a file full of copies of documents and the law says I can declassify documents if I have originals.”

She said she requested the originals from the Hawks and crime intelligen­ce but “nobody could produce” them.

“I had to decide whether I become unlawful and sign against Miss [law]... the catch was if I sign, I become a criminal,”

NPA spokesman Luvuyo Mfaku said: “We have nothing to do with classifica­tion [of informatio­n], it’s a police issue”.

Hawks spokesman Brigadier Hangwani Mulaudzi said: “We are not in a position to comment on a matter that’s still pending.”

 ?? / THULANI MBELE ?? Former crime intelligen­ce head Richard Mdluli had his fraud and corruption case struck off the court role.
/ THULANI MBELE Former crime intelligen­ce head Richard Mdluli had his fraud and corruption case struck off the court role.

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