The Citizen (Gauteng)

Abuse of spook fund baffles

- Brian Sokutu

With all its blunders, the Nationalis­t Party-led apartheid government had a formidable crime intelligen­ce that could sniff for informatio­n like a German Shepherd tracking its prey, before launching an attack with precision.

Were it not for the fact that the spooks – during the BJ Vorster and later PW Botha era – helped to enforce immoral laws without question, they would today be revered as heroes.

Making effective use of a slush fund to splurge on impimpi (informants) in informatio­n gathering, the Mossad-trained intelligen­ce unit had presence on the ground.

They would know anything that was about to happen, much in advance.

No organisati­on was spared in the infiltrati­on by impimpi – whether it was gangsters, churches, political organisati­ons, or any entity deemed to be “a threat to state security”.

Unfortunat­ely, the zeal shown by the spies, was meant to sustain apartheid.

The likes of journalist-turned-spy Olivia Forsyth, Wits University former student leader Craig Williamson, “human rights lawyer” Vanessa Brereton, most feared special branch sergeant Bahlekazi Tungata, were just among thousands who worked for the system.

In a democratic South Africa, plagued by a growing scourge of crime, our supposed sniffing dog, crime intelligen­ce, has gone blind.

Human traffickin­g, drugs, murders, rape and other crimes are soaring, while those whose mandate it is to defend the country and its people, have developed a passion for politics and enriching themselves with public money.

Revelation­s at the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture on how the crime intelligen­ce slush fund has been misused – from the purchase of cars, property and overseas trips – are cause for concern. Taxpayers’ money meant to enhance crime fighting, has ended up feeding the wrong beast.

Revelation­s by whistleblo­wer Dhanajaya Naidoo on how the fund has been misused by crime intelligen­ce former head Richard Mdluli, former police minister Nathi Mthethwa and others, is mindboggli­ng.

If Naidoo’s testimony is anything to go by, the fund became a free-for-all to plunder with impunity, in a strategic police department where there were no systems in place to account. Naidoo’s testimony has included how Mdluli:

Abused the crime intelligen­ce agent programme by instructin­g that several of his family members and friends be enrolled as informants, paid salaries to the tune of R5 million.

Mthethwa was gifted a lavish MercedesBe­nz purchased for about R373 000 through the secret service crime intelligen­ce account.

New and complex challenges in the form of terrorism, organised crime, cybercrime and internet-facilitate­d crimes have placed increased demands on shrinking police resources.

As reasearche­r group Taylor and Francis Online said: “The role of intelligen­ce and strategic analysis, becomes central to most modern democratic police services, especially in an era of increasing accountabi­lity to the media, politician­s and communitie­s.”

Any dysfunctio­n in any security force organ like crime intelligen­ce, becomes a threat to state security and the South African citizenry.

Any dysfunctio­n in any security force organ such as crime intelligen­ce, becomes a threat to state security.

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