The Herald (South Africa)

Guptas tipped off on Thuli spy claims

E-mail sent before State Security inquiry

- Kyle Cowan

DAYS before State Security Minister David Mahlobo announced an inquiry into claims that former public protector Thuli Madonsela was a CIA spy, Atul Gupta knew what was coming. He had been sent an e-mail with a link to the blog that Mahlobo cited in support of his allegation, leaked e-mails have revealed.

The inquiry has yet to produce any substantia­tion of Mahlobo’s claims.

Madonsela said the revelation that the blog had been sent to Gupta was shocking.

On February 25 2015, Mahlobo said that a government investigat­ion had found a blog called africainte­ligencelea­ks.wordpress.com on which it was claimed that a CIA ID card with Madonsela’s picture on it was in existence.

The blog claimed that various e-mail accounts belonging to Madonsela were proof she was working for the CIA. The leaked Gupta e-mails show: ý On February 12 2015 at 4.37pm, a “tip-off” is sent to the Gupta-owned New Age newspaper’s news desk, info@thenewage.co.za, by dereklee20­14@hushmail.com. The e-mail titled “Is Thulisiwe Nomkhosi Madonsela an agent or a CIA employee?” contains text from, and a link to, Africa Intelligen­ce Leaks.

Exactly five minutes later, at 4.42pm, the e-mail is forwarded to Atul Gupta by an employee of The New Age, Haranath Ghosh.

Atul forwards it two hours later to Rajesh “Tony” Gupta and to Surya Singhala, Ajay Gupta’s son, at an e-mail address at Gupta-owned company Sahara.

The Africa Intelligen­ce Leaks blog, which is still active, has been described by former DA MP Lindiwe Mazibuko as a product of the “lunatic fringe”, but Mahlobo and the State Security Agency deemed it necessary to launch an investigat­ion into its claims – with no announced findings to date.

At the time, Madonsela was prepared to go to court to stop the investigat­ion, which she believed would be used as a pretext for the State Security Agency to tap phones at the public protector’s office or for President Jacob Zuma to suspend her while the investigat­ion was under way.

Madonsela told The Times the claims she was a spy had surfaced before Mahlobo’s announceme­nt of the State Security Agency investigat­ion, but the various stories differed in their accounts of how she had been recruited, the identity of her “handler” and the nature of her covert mission.

“This one was a third story, all of them unrelated to each other . . . they were desperatel­y looking for someone [to push the story] but they didn’t employ people intelligen­t enough to come up with a credible story. But I didn’t know the Guptas were involved,” Madonsela said.

The e-mail’s date, she said, would mean either the Guptas gave it to them (the State Security Agency), or the same source did.

“Why on earth would this anonymous tip-off be sent to Atul Gupta?

“If it had been sent to The New Age or ANN7, I would say it was random news, but sent to Atul it would seem to support the narrative of state capture . . . I just find it strange that it was sent to Atul Gupta.”

Madonsela said the fact that it took only five minutes for the e-mail to be sent from The New Age to Atul Gupta supported the theory that someone had been told to expect the message and to pass it on.

“I am shocked. I always knew the blog had been put out by the State Security Agency or somebody related to them,” she said.

The State Security Agency has said it will respond tomorrow to questions submitted by The Times last week.

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