Sunday Times

Absa shut accounts over ‘arms payments’

- MZILIKAZI wa AFRIKA

ABSA closed seven accounts belonging to businessma­n Fana Hlongwane and his companies because he was accused of receiving “suspicious” payments that ran into millions of rands.

Hlongwane masquerade­d as a “consultant” in the government’s controvers­ial arms deal and he was allegedly paid more than R200-million in commission at the time.

Hlongwane was a special adviser to the then defence minister Joe Modise when the R46 billion arms deal was signed in December 1999.

Absa closed Hlongwane’s accounts, which had multimilli­on-rand balances, in August 2013 after he was classified as a “politicall­y exposed person” and a “high-risk client”.

This followed a Sunday Times report in 2010, which said documents in the newspaper’s possession showed the businessma­n had been indirectly paid more than R200 million by British defence company BAE and its agents. It is suspected the cash was used to bribe officials.

Marthinus Janse van Rensburg, Absa’s general counsel for Africa shared services, said if the allegation­s were true, the bank suspected some of Hlongwane’s accounts might have violated its antimoney-laundering policies.

He said the level of risk was not one the bank “was willing to carry given the fees generated on those accounts”.

Janse van Rensburg also disclosed in court papers that the Seriti Commission — appointed by President Jacob Zuma to investigat­e allegation­s of fraud and corruption in the arms deal — had requested informatio­n from Absa about one or more of Hlongwane’s accounts.

Hlongwane felt the bank was unfair and had breached his constituti­onal rights. He tried to force the bank, under the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act, to disclose what informatio­n it had taken into considerat­ion when it closed his accounts.

Judge Nomonde Mngqibisa Thusi of the High Court in Pretoria said on Thursday the bank had acted in good faith and Hlongwane could not force it to supply him with all the documents it used to make its decision.

Hlongwane had also instituted a complaint with the Ombudsman for Banking Services to force Absa to reverse its decision, but the bank was cleared of any wrongdoing.

Hlongwane made headlines recently when Deputy Finance Minister Mcebisi Jonas said the businessma­n was present when Ajay Gupta offered him, Jonas, the post of finance minister — then held by Nhlanhla Nene — in October last year.

Jonas claims he was offered the job more than a month before Zuma fired Nene.

Hlongwane, who was interviewe­d by former public protector Thuli Madonsela, confirmed the meeting, at which Duduzane Zuma was also present, but denied that the Guptas offered Jonas a cabinet post.

Hlongwane this week refused to comment on the high court ruling.

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