Sunday Times

Cabals, conspiraci­es exposed

- THABO MOKONE

INTELLIGEN­CE reports have been used to fight political battles in the ANC and to discredit party leaders since the 1990s.

A former South African National Defence Force chief, General George Meiring, submitted a report compiled by “military intelligen­ce” to then president Nelson Mandela in 1998 alleging that former Umkhonto weSizwe chief of staff Siphiwe Nyanda and other prominent ANC leaders were plotting to overthrow the government.

The Meiring report alleged that the plot included the assassinat­ion of Mandela, the murder of judges and the forcible occupation of parliament. A commission headed by then chief justice Ismail Mohamed dismissed the report, which had been compiled by a discredite­d military intelligen­ce informer.

In 2001, then safety and security minister Steve Tshwete went on national TV and claimed that ANC leaders Tokyo Sexwale, Mathews Phosa and Cyril Ramaphosa had been planning to assassinat­e then president Thabo Mbeki.

Tshwete’s allegation­s were based on an “intelligen­ce report” that was put together by former ANC Youth League leader James Nkambule. The report was later rejected as an unsubstant­iated rumour.

In 2005, the National Intelligen­ce Agency was at the centre of a hoax e-mail saga. The e-mails alleged that there was a conspiracy led by a “Xhosa faction” in the government and ANC that wanted to destroy then deputy president Jacob Zuma, calling him a “Zulu boy”.

Two leading ANC members at the time, Bulelani Ngcuka and Saki Macozoma, were implicated in the saga. The then inspectorg­eneral of intelligen­ce, Zolile Ngcakani, found the e-mails to be false and dismissed them as the work of conspirato­rs.

Two years later, the Browse Mole report surfaced, claiming that Zuma was being bankrolled by Libyan and Angolan leaders to unseat Mbeki. Reports at the time said it was first leaked to Cosatu by an anonymous fax.

The report was dismissed af- ter an investigat­ion by parliament’s intelligen­ce committee, which said it had been compiled illegally by the now disbanded Directorat­e of Special Operations, which had fallen “prey to informatio­n peddlers”.

Then, in 2011, during the runup to the ANC’s elective conference, the “ground coverage intelligen­ce report” came to light. Compiled by then suspended crime intelligen­ce boss Richard Mdluli, it claimed that ANC leaders Zweli Mkhize, Sexwale and Paul Mashatile were planning to topple Zuma.

Everyone denied being part of the plot and Mkhize went on to be elected as the ANC’s new treasurer-general.

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