Sowetan

Atul Gupta SA citizen but Gigaba says no

If found guilty then family’s status in SA could be revoked

- By Kyle Cowan TimesLIVE –

Re-appointed Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba yesterday said Atul Gupta was not a South African citizen – but TimesLIVE has proof that Atul is in fact a citizen.

Contained in thousands of GuptaLeaks e-mails is a copy of Atul’s South African passport. The date of issue is July 31 2015‚ and the document is valid for 10 years.

Under “Nationalit­y”‚ the passport lists Atul as “South African”. Non-citizens cannot apply for passports.

Gigaba‚ who was Home Affairs Minister between May 2014 and March last year‚ made pronouncem­ents on the citizenshi­p of Atul while clarifying allegation­s that he had treated Atul’s older brother Ajay and his family preferenti­ally when Ajay‚ his mother Angoori‚ wife Shevani and two sons‚ Surya and Kamal Singhala‚ applied for naturalisa­tion in 2013.

The applicatio­n was rejected‚ Gigaba explained‚ because Angoori had spent more than 90 days out of the country since the granting of her permanent residency permit in 2003.

According to regulation­s‚ if a family applies and one member did not qualify for any reason‚ the entire applicatio­n would then be denied.

Gigaba and department­al director-general Mkuseli Apleni were providing feedback at a media briefing following meetings the pair had with the parliament­ary portfolio committee on Home Affairs to answer questions over the Guptas’ naturalisa­tion. Gigaba was confident the committee had accepted their explanatio­ns.

During the media briefing‚ Apleni also stated that Atul and Ajay were not SA citizens and that they had been travelling on Indian passports.

According to Gigaba‚ one of the key requiremen­ts for granting citizenshi­p would have been that the Guptas renounce their Indian citizenshi­p.

“They were asked to renounce the citizenshi­p of the country of origin, at which point Mr Ajay Gupta declined renouncing his Indian citizenshi­p.

Therefore Mr Ajay Gupta is not a South African citizen. He is a permanent residence permit holder‚ which he received in 2008,” Gigaba said.

TimesLIVE has only found a copy of an Indian passport for Ajay in the Gupta e-mails‚ confirming Gigaba’s assertion.

Gigaba added: “Mr Atul Gupta also is not [a citizen] – but he was not one of the five people who had applied for citizenshi­p. That is why their citizenshi­p of South Africa is non-existent‚ it’s null and void Because they could not renounce citizenshi­p of India.”

According to Immigratio­n Consulting South Africa’s website‚ permanent residents cannot obtain a SA passport.

Gigaba’s spokesman Mayihlome Tshwete said in response to queries over the apparent contradict­ion‚ that Gigaba had not vocalised his meaning properly. “Minister Gigaba was saying that Atul never applied to him [for citizenshi­p], which is a fact.

“No matter their status‚ any court ruling that determines guilt will afford us the grounds to revoke status.”

 ??  ?? Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba.
Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba.

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