The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Intelligen­ce’ was weapon Zuma used

- Brian Sokutu

Whether it was flushing out opponents, finding a way to fire ministers or reshufflin­g Cabinet, using dodgy intelligen­ce reports gave former president Jacob Zuma the ammunition he needed, a political analyst says.

Somadoda Fikeni, an academic at the University of SA, said this in reaction to this week’s revelation­s by Minister of Finance Nhlanhla Nene before the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture. Nene testified that Zuma used an intelligen­ce report called Project Spider Web to warn Treasury was being “infiltrate­d by spies” in 2015.

Fikeni said: “Zuma’s entire life in the struggle has been in the military and the intelligen­ce space. So it’s no coincidenc­e that intelligen­ce was used as a weapon during his tenure as president.

“We saw the securitisa­tion of the state and disproport­ionate deployment of ministers, chosen mainly from Umkhonto we Sizwe. Take [former finance minister for a few days] Des van Rooyen, who has no financial pedigree.

“Using intelligen­ce reports, it is easy to cast aspersions on people without backing them up.”

This led to some ministers and senior civil servants who disagreed with Zuma being branded as “spies”. Nene also disclosed that Zuma – in the presence of an Engen-Petronas official – gave the finance minister a dressing down for his hesitancy in approving a PetroSA guarantee to raise funds to buy a refinery from Malaysia.

The “spies” cited in Project Spider Web were respected senior civil servants who constitute­d the backbone of Treasury. They included former deputy finance minister Mcebisi Jonas, former director-general Lungisa Fuzile, former chief procuremen­t officer Kenneth Brown, former deputy directors-general Andrew Donaldson, Anthony Julies and Ismail Momoniat and Public Investment Corporatio­n CEO Daniel Matjila.

According to the document, they were all bent on influencin­g economic and fiscal policy and the appointmen­t of key leaders in the Reserve Bank, Treasury, trade and industry department and state-owned enterprise­s “that fall under their ministries”.

Nene said: “According to the report, I was being handled by [Absa CEO] Maria Ramos ... Fuzile would not extend his contract ending in August 2015, but would join the University of Stellenbos­ch – a catalyst for big changes inside Treasury. Avrit Halstead would be promoted to director-general. Michael Sachs, then deputy director-general, would be transferre­d to an SOE. Tumi Moleke would be transferre­d to another ministry as deputy director-general working with Treasury.”

Zuma’s discredite­d intelligen­ce report turned out to be “a pretext by those behind him who wished to raid the public coffers”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa