Sowetan

Full disclosure only way to exorcise Gupta ghosts

Now is the time for the captured to come clean

- Ranjeni Munusamy

What caused the unravellin­g of Nhlanhla Nene?

Hitherto he was presumed to be like Caesar’s wife – beyond reproach and one of the last people to come to mind when considerin­g government high-fliers in the line of fire at the state capture inquiry.

Despite holding one of the most high-profile positions in government, Nene was a cautious, somewhat innocuous figure that hardly featured in the media, let alone associated with grand corruption.

He did, however, have one of the most reported and costly dismissals in South African history. His sudden and unjust firing by former president Jacob Zuma in December 2015 cost the country billions and cast him as one of the biggest victims of the state capture network.

By removing him, Zuma and the Guptas had their grip on the ultimate prize: the National Treasury.

But pressure from powerful quarters forced Zuma to reappoint Pravin Gordhan as the sentinel over the Treasury, causing a setback for the Gupta network. While the Treasury was temporaril­y protected, it was too late for Nene.

He retreated to his farm in rural KwaZulu-Natal. Four months later, he was faced with a request that would contribute to his undoing in October 2018.

Nene was approached by eNCA for an interview about his dismissal and future plans. He has always been wary of the media and it is almost impossible to find a news article or interview where he talked about himself.

He resolved to play it safe, not divulging details of the dramatic events that led to his axing, even though it was well known that his opposition to the nuclear deal made his position as finance minister in Zuma’s cabinet untenable.

Nene did not anticipate that one of the questions would be about his interactio­ns with the Gupta family and he had to come up with a split-second response.

At the time, in April 2016, Nene believed that his career in government was over and there was no suggestion of a change in the ANC or the country’s leadership (the interview was almost two years before the ANC’s Nasrec conference).

The Gupta contagion was gaining ground then. The Hawks were in pursuit of Gordhan, nobody acted as a result of Mcebisi Jonas’s revelation that the Guptas tried to promote and bribe him, and the shadow state was consolidat­ing its grip on the South African Revenue Service (Sars) and state-owned companies like Eskom.

The interview was 12 days after the constituti­onal Court found that Zuma had breached the Constituti­on by failing to comply with the public protector’s report on Nkandla. Zuma apologised for the “frustratio­n and confusion” caused and got away with it.

Nene was holed up in the KwaZulu-Natal heartland where political hits are commonplac­e. He panicked and lied that he had not met the Guptas formally.

Since then, there were ample opportunit­ies to correct the lie, or at least confide to those in his circle.

What would have been the effect of doing so?

The two most prominent advocates of the crusade against state capture were Nene’s friends and former colleagues in the finance ministry, Gordhan and Jonas.

Did Nene just forget to mention it or did he deliberate­ly conceal from them that he visited the Guptas seven times?

Had Nene told Gordhan and Jonas, it would have broken the trust circle. They would probably have reacted the same way many of us did after Nene’s admission to the Zondo commission last week, feeling stunned and betrayed.

In response to questions from the Sunday Times, Nene said he had not thought to inform President Cyril Ramaphosa of his meetings with the Guptas when he reappointe­d him finance minister in February.

“The question never arose and I am not aware that presidents ask people they are about to appoint to reveal who they have met as part of the appointmen­t process.

“Though at the time I did not think that the meetings I had had with the Guptas were relevant for the purpose of my appointmen­t, looking back, I should have informed the president then, or subsequent­ly,” said Nene.

It’s the details of the discussion­s that would have mattered to Ramaphosa. He still does not know what happened over tea between the perpetrato­rs of mass looting of the state and the man he entrusted the National Treasury to.

Could Nene really have been the exception to the Guptas’ pattern of seeking to buy and control everyone they met?

The big question now is whether Nene’s decision to testify at the inquiry made him a political target that led to his dirty laundry being aired?

Or was it a matter of time before the Guptas engineered his downfall through a calculated release of informatio­n?

The Guptas are waging a strategic fightback campaign by trying to discredit their detractors and bolstering their allies, including Zuma and suspended Sars commission­er Tom Moyane.

Through their lawyers and surrogates, there is a steady drip of informatio­n to certain people in the media and the EFF. This is to manipulate the national discourse and particular­ly to counter the evidence at the Zondo commission.

Nene’s problem is that though he might not have carried out any of the Guptas’ instructio­ns, he unknowingl­y surrendere­d his life to them during their dalliance years ago.

They own him and all his skeletons.

Nene would have destroyed the Guptas’ power over him had he come clean earlier. His admission to the Zondo commission appeared coerced because of the campaign to discredit him.

There is a lesson for all other potential witnesses worrying about when their liaisons with the Guptas and other scandals will be exposed.

Their only option is to end the Guptas’ hold over them through full disclosure. Otherwise they must prepare to walk the plank behind Nene.

Our battered nation, even those who were compromise­d, needs to rally together to take our power back.

‘‘ Did Nene’s decision to testify at the inquiry make him a target of the Zuma group fightback?

 ?? / ESA ALEXANDER ?? Finance minister Nhlanhla Nene may be regretting opting to testify at state capture inquiry.
/ ESA ALEXANDER Finance minister Nhlanhla Nene may be regretting opting to testify at state capture inquiry.
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