The Citizen (Gauteng)

Right2Know alleges more apartheid-era looting sprees

- Eric Naki

While the South African Reserve Bank has found a number of errors in the leaked public protector’s report into the investigat­ion into Absa Bank’s apartheid-era bailout, Right2Know (R2K) is looking forward to the next step of the protector’s much-delayed investigat­ion to reveal more apartheid looting sprees.

Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago said they have identified several errors in the preliminar­y report which was leaked before Absa could finish with its submission­s and without Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane honouring the bank’s invitation to come and inspect confidenti­al documents pertinent to the successful finalisati­on of her probe.

In the report, Absa is required to pay back R2.25 billion as interest from a bailout given to Bankorp before the bank was acquired by Absa in 1992.

However, Mkhwebane’s action was seen as revenge by the Zuma faction against Absa, one of several major banks that closed the accounts of the Zuma-aligned Gupta family due to suspected illegal transactio­ns.

Political analysts associated the Absa probe with on-going political battles in government and the ruling party, including the alleged attempt by the Zuma faction to control the National Treasury.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan was allegedly seen as a stumbling block in these nefarious attempts, hence initial attempts to prosecute him on unfounded charges that have since been withdrawn by the National Prosecutin­g Authority.

Yesterday, R2K welcomed Mkhwebane’s probe into what it called looting from the SA Reserve Bank during the apartheid era.

“Not only is the public protector’s report much delayed, but the saga itself has drawn out since the ’90s, when the Reserve Bank first had an opportunit­y to fully recover the apartheid-era loans from Absa. This entire episode underscore­s how little has been done to uncover apartheid-era corruption and return the proceeds of economic crime under the previous regime, more than two decades later,” said R2K spokespers­on Busi Mtabane in a statement yesterday.

She said the probe was a reminder that two decades into democracy, the country was yet to see the full release of apartheide­ra secrets.

Mtabane claimed these included millions of documents from the apartheid regime that were still held by department­s across government that were yet to be released to the public.

“In fact, the Reserve Bank currently faces a court challenge for refusing to release its apartheid records to the South African History Archive and the Open Secrets project,” she continued.

Mtabane also alleged that a documentar­y titled Project Speak on Absa’s Reserve Bank loans and broader evidence of apartheid-era looting was censored by the SABC, who commission­ed it.

“The SABC sought a court order gagging film-maker Sylvia Vollenhove­n from distributi­ng the film, or using the footage. If the SABC had not done a cover-up of its own documentar­y, millions of South Africans would know about this story already,” Mtabane said.

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