The Citizen (Gauteng)

Freedom-for-cash scheme bust

ARRESTED: ELEVEN HOME AFFAIRS AND CORRECTION­AL SERVICES OFFICIALS FACE GRAFT RAP

- Virginia Keppler – virginiak@citizen.co.za

36 female drug smugglers allegedly illegally freed for R3 000 to R6 000.

Minister of Police Bheki Cele claimed a victory in his “squeezing crime to zero” project yesterday after police arrested several government officials implicated in an allegedly illegal parole scheme.

The officials allegedly illegally released 36 female parolees from prisons in exchange for payments ranging from R3 000 to R6 000. Cele said most of the women were drug smugglers and were incarcerat­ed in Johannesbu­rg Womens’ Prison.

The suspects were arrested on Friday in Soweto and Johannesbu­rg after a joint anti-corruption investigat­ion undertaken by the department of home affairs, the department of correction­al services and the SA Police Service crime intelligen­ce unit. Cele said they released the women over a period of more than a year and were facing corruption charges.

He said the Saps crime intelligen­ce unit had been investigat­ing the allegedly corrupt activities of a multitude of department of correction­al services and department of home affairs officials since mid-2016.

“The foreign parolees, most of whom were drug smugglers or drug mules, have to be released and deported to their country of origin through the Lindela Deportatio­n Centre. Instead they were sent directly to the Johannesbu­rg home affairs office for a procedural and illegal early release.

“Some of the illegally released parolees and ex-convicts left South Africa at their own expense. Some remained here, of which six have been rearrested.”

They were three Guyana nationals from South America and one Zambian who were arrested for narcotics offences and two Zimbabwean­s arrested for theft.

The officials were paid in cash or by deposits into their bank accounts. The inmates from African countries had to pay R3 000, while those from outside Africa, such as the South Americans, were charged R6 000.

“The department of correction­al services’ suspects also compiled fraudulent parole documents enabling the suspects from home affairs to create false release documents to assist the inmates to flee South Africa or remain in the country,” Cele said.

Twenty-six corrupt officials were identified, but after consultati­ons with the Directorat­e of Public Prosecutio­ns, it was decided that 11 would be indicted. Police are still hunting one suspect while the eleventh died last month. Most of the suspected officials appeared in court yesterday.

 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? STOPPING THE ROT. Minister of Home Affairs Malusi Gigaba, left, Minister of Police Bheki Cele, centre, and national police commission­er General Khehla Sitole announce the officials’ arrests.
Picture: Jacques Nelles STOPPING THE ROT. Minister of Home Affairs Malusi Gigaba, left, Minister of Police Bheki Cele, centre, and national police commission­er General Khehla Sitole announce the officials’ arrests.

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