Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Gordhan: Bell Pottinger 2

‘Strategy against state capture probe’

- BALDWIN NDABA

IN THE week where the former president’s son appeared in the dock shackled on corruption charges, Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan has warned that there is a strategy to hinder investigat­ions into state capture.

Gordhan said the new strategy, which he dubbed “Bell Pottinger Part 2”, was a well-co-ordinated plan to undermine democratic institutio­ns set up to restore good governance and management as well as to investigat­e the wrongs of the past.

“There is a serious and determined attempt to push back investigat­ions into state capture. Bell Pottinger Part 2 is an undergroun­d media strategy to attack those who stood up against wrong things,” Gordhan said.

The public enterprise­s minister was the guest speaker at the 40th anniversar­y of the formation of the Pretoria Press Club in Centurion, outside Pretoria, on Thursday night. This was the same event where AmaBhungan­e was given the Newsmakers of the Year award by the Press Club for its role in exposing the Gupta family and its network in allegedly capturing the state during the reign of former president Jacob Zuma.

Gordhan said the Gupta leaks had managed to help them to connect the dots and to understand what state capture in the South African context meant.

“We have gathered enough informatio­n on state capture and enough evidence to ensure that the perpetrato­rs of state capture are going to wear orange uniforms,” Gordhan said, but he warned that the perpetrato­rs were “fighting back”.

Gordhan said the new strategy of the Bell Pottinger 2 agents was to “capture the revolution” and divert the attention of the people from the real issues facing South Africans.

“Madiba wanted to create a new type of society of non-racialism where we acknowledg­ed that, in the past, colonialis­m and apartheid had done a huge damage. New institutio­ns are aimed at rebuilding South Africa and creating new possibilit­ies for its people.

“In the past two years, we discovered state capture and now the defence of state capture by attacking those who exposed the capture process. Civil society and those who exposed state capture are the very same people coming under attack to undermine the process of rebuilding our society.

“What is happening now is that the colour of our skin is being used as a basis for attacks and to fire cheap political shots to their advantage,” Gordhan said.

His apparent attack on Julius Malema came after the EFF leader told journalist­s that his troubles and subsequent criminal charges of tax evasion against him came after his decision to question Zuma’s decision to appoint Gordhan as finance minister in 2009.

Malema reportedly told the media: “I became corrupt in this country the day I challenged Pravin’s appointmen­t. I said to (former president Jacob) Zuma: ‘Why do you keep appointing minorities to the economic cluster to the exclusion of black Africans?’

“That day, I was declared an enemy and, stupidly enough, I had my own problems of Sars and that’s where they got me,” the EFF leader said.

Without mentioning names, Gordhan was adamant that the attacks on him and others were aimed at stopping them from trying to recover the billions that were flown out of the country and others given to private businesses in the country.

“There is fight-back phenomena by those who want to mask their role in state capture and continue what they were doing. It did not just happen because businesses came along and made friends. Later, a friendly chequebook was used to extract money out of the state. There were lawyers, financial advisers, consulting firms, auditing firms involved in the state capture process. Their network is now on the wall just like posters for people to begin to know how the network works,” Gordhan said.

His claims come as it was reported that the EFF leader received a R1 million loan from a business associate of self-confessed tobacco smuggler Adriano Mazzotti.

It is alleged that Mazzotti had links to former Sars boss Tom Moyane, who has been implicated in state capture.

Earlier, Gordhan told the audience that President Cyril Ramaphosa’s election at the ANC’s elective conference in December last year gave them sufficient but not adequate powers to manage state institutio­ns and to steer them in the right direction.

He said that South African Express (SAX), which was allegedly brought to its knees through the Gupta network, had now found its feet again. Gordhan said the new board he had appointed four weeks ago and those who had volunteere­d to assist the airline were now turning its fortunes around.

“I want to urge you and AmaBhungan­e to investigat­e the kind of role profession­als played in state capture,” Gordhan said.

 ??  ?? R19.50 incl vat
R19.50 incl vat
 ?? PICTURE: JACQUES NAUDE/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan has issued a warning of what he sees as a second act of the Bell Pottinger saga.
PICTURE: JACQUES NAUDE/ AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan has issued a warning of what he sees as a second act of the Bell Pottinger saga.
 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS/AFRICAN
NEWS AGENCY (ANA) ?? EFF leader Julius Malema has long been a critic of Gordhan.
PICTURE: REUTERS/AFRICAN NEWS AGENCY (ANA) EFF leader Julius Malema has long been a critic of Gordhan.

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