Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Niehaus, Guptas, MK vets made for each other

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IT IS said that 90% of politician­s give the other 10% a bad name. Which is perhaps generous. Good politician­s, the US journalist HL Mencken noted, are as unthinkabl­e as honest burglars.

Then there’s the low-level entity that is Carl Niehaus, now back to bother us as a member of the MK Military Veterans Associatio­n’s national executive. Such was the chorus of surprised gasps at Niehaus’s return to public life that the associatio­n’s president, Kebby Maphatsoe, was moved to suggest the former ANC national executive committee (NEC) member should not be judged by his controvers­ial past.

“No one is perfect in the ranks of the ANC and MK,” Maphatsoe told ANA last month. Which is certainly true where Niehaus is concerned.

“So you’re here raising Carl’s credibilit­y? Do not take lightly that he is just a fraudster, no. We are very proud of his Struggle credential­s, that is why we elected him to the MKMVA NEC and hope he will do good work for the associatio­n… he is a communicat­ion commissar.”

He’s a liar, is what he is, and a pro at that. Last weekend the Sunday Independen­t published Niehaus’s attempts to detail the crimes of dastardly white monopoly capital (WMC), which apparently are legion.

WMC bankrolled former public protector Thuli Madonsela’s report on state capture, for example. Ditto the reports on wholesale Zupta corruption by academics and the SA Council of Churches. Somehow they were also responsibl­e for the #GuptaEmail leaks and, just for good measure, control most of the mainstream media.

Here at the Mahogany Ridge, we were taken aback that Niehaus neglected to mention WMC’s role in the outbreaks of rinderpest as well. But elsewhere, he’d told ANN7, the infotainme­nt channel, that whole bunches of the ruling party’s former NEC, from Pravin Gordhan to Trevor Manuel, have now been captured by WMC and “are doing their bidding for them”.

Manuel, in particular, was “the personific­ation of exactly what was wrong with this country”, Niehaus claimed. “Living in the lap of luxury has made Trevor Manuel forget his Struggle history and an agent of white monopoly capital.”

How irritating for Manuel. It is one thing to be thus maligned, but to be maligned by Niehaus? How then do you respond? Can you ignore the sliming of a worm? True, it’s not life-threatenin­g, but it is a bother, like having dog sh*t on your shoe; it’s a mess not of your making, and you’re going to have to deal with it sooner rather than later.

Perhaps Derek Hanekom had the right approach. Responding to Niehaus’s new role as Gupta Monopoly Capital’s imbongi wallah, the former tourism minister bluntly tweeted, “Carl Niehaus is a liar and a con artist”.

It’s worth recalling some of his most shameful porkies. He claimed he earned a doctorate in theology from the University of Utrecht during his stint as ambassador at The Hague. Not so, said the university. No degree from us. In 2003, he apparently persuaded East London travel agent Cheryl Clur to stump up R100 000 for a free holiday in Mauritius after telling her he had cancer. Clur told The Star, “He told me he had been ill with leukaemia, had chemothera­py and wanted a holiday for his wife and two children. He played on my emotions with his illness.”

Facing eviction from his R45 000-a-month Midrand home in 2009, Niehaus told his landlord, to whom he owed more than R300 000, that the ANC’s “serious organisati­on challenges” were to blame for “payment delays”.

He lied about his father’s passing, and bummed money from the then deputy justice minister Andries Nel to transport the body from the Western Cape to his home in Zeerust, in the North West. Wanting to offer his friend support, Nel drove to Zeerust on the day of the supposed funeral, only to find he’d been taken for a patsy. There was no such death.

There’s a common thread here. Together with his history of forging signatures to get his hands on tom when he was chief executive of the Gauteng Economic Developmen­t Agency, the years of borrowing from ANC colleagues and business leaders, and his wheedling attempts to cosy up to the late Brett Kebble, it does seem that Niehaus has a problem with money. That he’s now hanging out at the Saxonwold Shebeen does suggest that his grubbing days are far from over. But, given the Guptas’ unfettered access to our money, financial security may at last be in the offing.

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