The Citizen (Gauteng)

Central bank rebuked

- Bernade e Wicks

The Supreme Court of Appeal has ordered the release of decades-old records which could shine a light on “significan­t corruption and fraud” under apartheid.

Judge Trevor Gorven on Friday found against the South African Reserve Bank (Sarb) after a sixyear wrangle for access to evidence it obtained as part of investigat­ions into large-scale fraud and the smuggling of precious metals in the 1980s and early 1990s.

The South African History Archives Trust (Saha) took Sarb to court after its applicatio­n for the records, in terms of the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act (Paia), was refused – a move Gorven labelled “redolent of the dark days of apartheid, where secrecy was routinely weaponised against a defenceles­s population”.

Gorven said Sarb’s response “bordered on the obstructiv­e” and was “certainly not in keeping with the purpose of Paia in its outworking of the provisions of the constituti­on to promote openness and transparen­cy”.

He declared Sarb’s decision unlawful and overturned a previous High Court in Johannesbu­rg order that dismissed the case.

Saha requested the records as research material for a book on economic crime related to the late Johann Blaauw, a former army brigadier implicated in illicit arms dealing; Vito Palazzolo, a member of the Sicilian Mafia, and Robert Hill, a local businessma­n who fled SA after he was accused of forging Eskom bonds.

In order to release the records, Sarb said it first had to inform Blaauw, Palazzolo and Hill.

It had not been able to do so and had, as a result, refused to release them.

Gorven said both Hill, who was alive, and Palazzolo had subsequent­ly been tracked down.

He found that “in effect, the Sarb decided to take no steps at all” to inform either of them.

Sarb argued Blaauw’s company records were “commercial informatio­n” and that to expect it to “trace the whereabout­s of the company” would be unreasonab­le.

Gorven believed this was “an astonishin­g averment when official records, which can be easily accessed, contain that informatio­n”.

He ordered the release of Blaauw’s records and that Palazzolo and Hill be informed of the requests for the release of theirs.

Saha said in a statement on Saturday the case “signals a tremendous victory for democracy and our constituti­onal right to access informatio­n...

“Given the alleged widespread state capture in South Africa, and untangling the extensive networks that enable corruption, it is more pressing than ever for the state to consider proactive disclosure of key archival records as a way of its stated commitment to the values of transparen­cy and integrity.”

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