The Herald (South Africa)

Linda Mti absent as Bosasa accused appear

Ex-prisons boss expected to hand himself over to face corruption charges

- Angela Daniels, Michael Kimberley and Graeme Hosken danielsa@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

Former correction­al services boss Linda Mti – who was believed to be in Port Elizabeth preparing to hand himself over to the Hawks – was conspicuou­sly absent from the first court appearance in Pretoria of those charged with corruption at facilities management company Bosasa.

The Hawks arrested Bosasa whistle-blower Angelo Agrizzi, former correction­al services chief financial officer Patrick Gillingham and former Bosasa chief financial officer Andries van Tonder on Wednesday.

Mti, who was briefly Nelson Mandela Bay’s head of safety and security, did not appear with his co-accused.

While the graft-accused Bosasa and correction­al services bosses received phone calls instructin­g them to surrender in Pretoria, some 1,000km away in Port Elizabeth, Hawks officers were digging up a nowdefunct prawn farm in Coega.

The calls – made by officials from the Serious Economic Offences Unit – appeared to have been specifical­ly designed to be placed at the same time as the dig, according to Hawks sources, who agreed to comment only if they were not identified.

“The suspects were ordered to hand themselves over within 24 hours,” one source said.

“As those calls were being made, other officers were at the [dig] site. It’s not the only place that is being searched. The evidence that has been given at the commission has been noted and it’s being acted on.

“The operations happening now are not the final pieces in the puzzle, but are crucial to closing this corruption down.

“Evidence has been gathered, with a lot pointing to senior government officials.

“There is a mountain of very interestin­g documents, including bank and travel records, which have been recovered,” the source said.

The Serious Economic Offences Unit, along with other units within the Hawks and the Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU), has for nine years been investigat­ing Bosasa and its alleged bribing and corrupting of government officials, including ministers, to secure R10bn worth of contracts with correction­al services.

According to a Hawks source, the investigat­ion has multiple legs, including looking at how money was shipped offshore, and is now being ramped up to include the help of Sars, the SIU and the National Treasury.

On Tuesday, as their colleagues began excavating a portion of the SeaArk prawn farm site, owned by Bosasa, Serious Economic Offences Unit officers called those who have now been charged, as well as Mti, to inform them of their impending arrests and instruct them to surrender. The four, along with former Bosasa executives Carlos Bonafacio and Frans Vorster, are alleged to have been behind the irregular awarding of R1.6bn worth of tenders to the company by correction­al services.

Agrizzi, Van Tonder and Gillingham, appearing in the Specialise­d Commercial Crimes Court in Pretoria on Wednesday on charges of fraud, money laundering and corruption, were granted bail of R20,000 each.

Bonafacio and Vorster, appearing in the same court on separate charges relating to Bosasa’s dealings with correction­al services, were also released on R20,000 bail.

They are all due back in court on March 27.

A source close to the investigat­ion said Mti was believed to be in Port Elizabeth and that his lawyer had been told about the arrest warrant.

“He [Mti] is aware of the warrant of arrest. I think he is going to hand himself over today [Wednesday] or tomorrow [Thursday]. I hope.”

Asked where Mti was, the source confirmed that the Hawks believed he was in Port Elizabeth.

With regard to Mti handing himself over, the source said: “His lawyers will make the arrangemen­ts.”

Agrizzi spent nine days

testifying at the Zondo commission of inquiry into state capture.

He told the commission that every contract between the state and Bosasa was tainted by bribery and corruption.

The arrests are related to alleged tender fraud that allowed Bosasa to secure lucrative contracts at prisons across SA.

In 2009, the SIU handed over a report related to four Bosasa contracts with correction­al services to the National Prosecutin­g Authority.

However, no prosecutio­n has taken place since then.

Mti’s phone was off for most of Wednesday, going directly to voicemail.

It was on briefly at about 3.30pm, but Mti did not answer any calls.

At his home in Greenbushe­s – which made the news in late January when Agrizzi told the Zondo commission that Bosasa had installed a security system on the property – Mti’s brother, Maxwell, 71, said he had been unaware of any arrests.

“I did hear about these things on Bosasa though. But I don’t know what is going on now,” Maxwell said.

Referring to the state capture commission, whose proceeding­s were being screened on the TV set behind him, he said that was all he knew.

“My brother doesn’t speak to me about these things.”

Asked when he last saw Mti, Maxwell said: “My brother was here last month. He came to visit me.”

The Greenbushe­s house is surrounded by a large electric fence, with numerous outhouses located on the property.

Mti also owns a house on the banks of the Sundays River in Colchester.

The large, modern home is situated inside the gated community of River Side Park.

All the windows of the house were wide open on Wednesday, but there did not seem to be anyone inside.

The house has electric and palisade fencing in front with electric fencing and a brick wall at the back.

Mti’s neighbour, Kobus Oosthuizen, 62, who worked at the Kirkwood prison, said Mti did not use the property often.

“His brother comes and cuts the grass. That is really the extent of the property’s use.”

But he said Mti did stay for the odd weekend.

“It was not often that he came,” Oosthuizen said.

“But I was shocked to hear about all this Bosasa stuff.

“I never thought he would be linked like this.”

He said he had invited Mti over to his house previously, but Mti had not arrived.

“Once, he bought me a bottle of Klipdrift and a six-pack of beer because I keep a watch on his house.”

Asked about the state capture commission and Mti’s alleged involvemen­t, Oosthuizen said: “It’s not nice to hear these things but I am glad things are moving on all this.”

After weeks of explosive testimony by former Bosasa chief operating officer Angelo Agrizzi before the Zondo Commission, the Hawks on Wednesday made several high-profile arrests for corruption, money laundering and fraud. Swift action by the Hawks after the recent revelation­s at the State Capture Commission must be welcomed as it signals an appetite to go after those implicated in corruption – at least we hope so. It is about time that finally, 10 years after the Special Investigat­ing Unit handed over a report to the NPA in relation to four Bosasa contracts with the department of correction­al services, we are seeing movement.

It comes at the right time as South Africans struggle to digest testimony upon testimony of blatant theft and corruption, implicatin­g everyone from government ministers to businessme­n and bureaucrat­s.

While these arrests give us a sense of optimism that finally there may be justice, Hawks investigat­ors must be careful not to be caught up in the fanfare.

It is an election year and the ANC is eager to shed itself of its image as a party harbouring criminals out to loot the coffers of the state – a party that can’t be trusted by the public. With this in mind, we hope that the Hawks are not taking the nation on a ride where the cases amount to nothing – as seen with the Guptas.

About a year ago almost to the day, Hawks crime busters raided the Saxonwold home of the Guptas, arresting three people in connection with the failed Estina dairy farm project in Vrede. This took place shortly after Cyril Ramaphosa took over as ANC president and a week before Jacob Zuma was forced to resign as president of the republic.

Nothing came of it, with the NPA eventually withdrawin­g the case because it needed more evidence to build a strong case.

We hope this will not be the case with the Bosasa matter, provided that Agrizzi and the other whistleblo­wers were being truthful and that the evidence against Gavin Watson and others is, indeed, overwhelmi­ng.

 ?? Picture: ALAISTER RUSSELL/THE SUNDAY TIMES ?? FACING THE MUSIC: Former Bosasa executive Frans Vorster, front, former chief operating officer Angelo Agrizzi, centre, and former chief financial officer Andries van Tonder at the Specialise­d Commercial Crimes Court in Pretoria
Picture: ALAISTER RUSSELL/THE SUNDAY TIMES FACING THE MUSIC: Former Bosasa executive Frans Vorster, front, former chief operating officer Angelo Agrizzi, centre, and former chief financial officer Andries van Tonder at the Specialise­d Commercial Crimes Court in Pretoria

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