The Citizen (KZN)

Fight or flight?

Whether the Gupta brothers decide to stay in South Africa or flee after the hasty sale of some of their assets, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa yesterday said the family would not escape the long arm of the law should allegation­s of state capture be prov

- Nkululeko Ncana news@citizen.co.za

Family has been widely implicated in allegation­s of state capture.

While the hasty sale of some of their South African assets sparking fears among parliament­arians that the Guptas are preparing to flee the country, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa has warned that the family will have no place to hide from possible prosecutio­n.

“No family is above the law. Whoever is found to have committed any misdemeano­ur will be investigat­ed and dealt with. Nobody should ever think they can escape the long arm of the law,” he told MPs during a question and answer session yesterday.

Ramaphosa was responding to opposition parties’ concerns that the Guptas were offloading their assets ahead of their apparent departure out of the country to escape prosecutio­n for alleged state capture.

The family recently sold its media businesses, ANN7 and The New Age newspaper, to former government spokespers­on Mzwanele “Jimmy”Manyi for R450 million, which is believed to have been entirely funded through vendor financing.

It was further reported yesterday that the Gupta brothers recently finalised the sale of mining company Tegeta Exploratio­n and Resources to a little-known Swiss company specialisi­ng in fashion for R2.9 billion.

Former finance minister Pravin Gordhan told the portfolio committee that an investigat­ion into the disposal of the assets should begin as a matter of urgency.

“We should have our urgency fuelled by the successive disposals within 48 hours of South African assets,” Gordhan said.

He added that the sales were “not just some ordinary citizen buying and selling something. These are all entities and companies implicated in state capture.”

Tegeta has been accused of acquiring more than R2 billion in coal supply contracts to Eskom without participat­ing in any tender processes.

Moreover, Tegeta was accused of supplying coal of poor quality which was flagged in assessment reports by Eskom technician­s as being unsuitable to use in power generation at its stations.

DA MP Natasha Mazzone, speaking in the same committee meeting as Gordhan, raised the prospect that the Guptas were selling up prior to leaving the country for Dubai.

“As far as I know‚ we don’t have an extraditio­n treaty with the UAE. So, if they leave South African soil, how are we going to get them back here?” she asked.

The acting chairperso­n of parliament’s portfolio on public enterprise­s, Zukiswa Rantho, said it was eager to “urgently start with investigat­ions into the state capture allegation­s” and confirmed that the main focus of the probe would be Eskom, Transnet and Denel.

She said the committee had noted the “hasty disposal” of the media assets of the Gupta family and would take legal advice on how this might impact on the work of the committee.

Ramaphosa later assured MPs that he “took comfort in the fact that the president is going to appoint a commission of inquiry” into state capture.

“These matters are happening out in the open and in the end, there will be no place to hide,” he said. “Once that commission is set up, it will have the power and the authority to scrutinise everything. In the end, it will be an independen­t commission that will do its work as effectivel­y as possible.”

The Gupta family stand accused of influencin­g the appointmen­t of individual­s into key positions in state-owned entities with the view of directing billions of rands in contracts to its companies and those with close links to them.

All major banks where Gupta business-owned accounts were held were closed, forcing the family to bank its money in India. –

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