Sunday Times

Spy blames shelving of Absa report on Mandela

- STEPHAN HOFSTATTER and MZILIKAZI wa AFRIKA

FORMER British spy Michael Oatley says Nelson Mandela scuppered his investigat­ion into apartheid looting because he feared it would alienate Afrikaners who had cut secret deals with the ANC.

This is claimed in letters Oatley wrote this week to public protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane and her predecesso­r Thuli Madonsela. The letters, seen by the Sunday Times, were sent after the public protector’s draft report of a suspect bailout by the Reserve Bank of Absa’s predecesso­r Bankorp was leaked.

The State Security Agency hired Oatley’s company CIEX in 1997 to investigat­e the bailout.

In the letters, Oatley slams Mkhwebane for “mangling” Madonsela’s report. He says it was Mandela, not Mbeki as Mkhwebane’s report states, who halted his investigat­ion.

Mbeki “sat up late going over my reports and discussing them with me, encouragin­g me”, he says.

“He particular­ly liked my suggestion that we would provide revelation­s about systemic Afrikaner white corruption to balance the much lesser (then) instances of black official corruption which were being hyped by an unfriendly media.”

Oatley believes Mandela was briefed only after two ministeria­l meetings where his recommenda­tions were endorsed.

“After that it all came unstuck. When he learned of it, President Mandela ruled that moving against Absa, and effectivel­y the Afrikaner financial nexus, was inconsiste­nt with his policy of reconcilia­tion (and with) secret pre-change agreements,” he says. “By then, of course, Absa had made itself the ANC’s best friend.” ‘MANGLED’: Public protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane

In his letter to Mkhwebane, Oatley says important papers he supplied to Madonsela are missing from the list of documents she said she relied on to produce her report.

This resulted in “fundamenta­l errors and distortion­s”, he says.

The documents that Oatley says are missing include:

Three reports compiled by CIEX about the Absa lifeboat, with detailed recommenda­tions on how the money could be recovered;

Specimen criminal charges to be brought against former Reserve Bank governor Chris Stals;

Oatley’s correspond­ence with Mbeki and former State Security Agency boss Billy Masetlha and;

Notes of meetings with cabinet ministers.

He says the documents would contradict the claim by Mbeki that the government terminated his company’s services because of a “failure to deliver”.

The public protector investigat­ion began in 2011 when advocate Paul Hoffman accused the government of wasting millions hiring CIEX to investigat­e the Absa lifeboat, then failing to pursue the case.

The leaked report recommends that the Reserve Bank should start legal action against Absa to recover R2.25-billion for an apartheid-era bailout of Bankorp in 1985.

Absa said it would make further submission­s in response to the report to correct “several factual and legal inaccuraci­es” without specifying these.

Mkhwebane said through her spokesman Oupa Segalwe that she would not comment “because we do not engage publicly on the content of leaked documents”.

Madonsela has denied claims that she prioritise­d her state capture investigat­ion over the Absa lifeboat case.

“I bent over backwards to accept and conduct the CIEX investigat­ion, though my team as a whole rejected it,” she said.

She said the final draft of the provisiona­l report landed on her desk two days before her last day in office. She sent it back for “fine tuning” and had not received the amended version before she left.

“If I did not want to conduct this investigat­ion, I had more than enough reasons and opportunit­ies to close it.

“The report had limited resources: me and an intern and later a trainee promoted to investigat­or.

“This was because I took it against my team’s conclusion­s and even on review.”

Madonsela said she had been unable to brief Mkhwebane on the Absa report.

“I only left an administra­tive report on the state of the investigat­ion and others.

“A request for a briefing meeting has not yet been honoured.

“A scheduled meeting for 17 October was cancelled by her with the understand­ing it would be reschedule­d, but attempts by me to reschedule have not been successful as my colleague claimed she was busy.”

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