Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Hawks ramp up probe of Guptas

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LAW enforcemen­t agencies are intensifyi­ng four investigat­ions into allegation­s that the family moved billions of rands out of South Africa.

But it is not only the Guptas who find themselves under scrutiny by the Hawks’ Serious Corruption Investigat­ion unit.

The media has also obtained documents showing that the Hawks are investigat­ing former Eskom chief executive officer (CEO) Brian Molefe, and President Jacob Zuma’s son Duduzane.

A tranche of documents detailing the status and progress of the investigat­ions show that Hawks’ detectives have:

Obtained detailed bank statements from Molefe and his “profile” to establish if he received any “kickbacks” from the Gupta family or their businesses;

Obtained detailed statements of seven Gupta-owned companies for expert analysis; Interviewe­d Eskom’s head of procuremen­t; Approached Treasury to request assistance with informatio­n relating to Tegeta Exploratio­n, the family’s mining company;

Forwarded informatio­n to prosecutor­s regarding allegation­s that the Guptas offered former deputy finance minister Mcebesi Jonas the job of his boss, and allegedly offered him a R600m bribe; and

Had little success in convincing former ANC MP Vytjie Mentor to cooperate with their investigat­ion into her allegation­s that the Guptas offered her the job of public enterprise­s minister if she would assist their airline in securing a lucrative route. Of Brian Molefe, one of the reports states: “A Financial Intelligen­ce Centre (FIC) request was made on the CEO of Eskom Mr Brian Molefe in order to establish his financial profile on whether there was any kickback to him or any other member of his family paid by the members of the Gupta family.

“The Gupta companies from which the unit requested financial statements include: Tegeta Exploratio­n, Shiva Uranium, JIC Mining Services, Optimum Coal, TNA Media, Sahara Computers and the Koornfonte­in Coal Mine.”

The reports are marked “secret” and titled “Task Team Investigat­ions: Pre-State Capture Report” and “Task Team Investigat­ions: Post-State Capture Report”, referring to former public protector Thuli Madonsela’s State of Capture report.

The charges being investigat­ed, however, do not relate to Madonsela’s report, but from charges laid by several politician­s, including the Economic Freedom Fighters’ Floyd Shivambu, the DA’s Natasha Mazzone and David Maynier, the Congress of the People’s Dennis Bloem, and Mentor.

The documents also state that investigat­ors have encountere­d resistance and received little cooperatio­n from witnesses.

According to the reports, investigat­ors have had to resort to requesting National Assembly Speaker Baleka Mbete’s interventi­on because some reluctant witnesses are members of Parliament.

City Press has also learnt that all state capture-related investigat­ions have been removed from different police stations around the country – including from Cape Town, Randburg and Rosebank – and consolidat­ed at the Hawks’ head office in Silverton, Pretoria.

One of the reports indicates that a Hawks detective struggled to get Mentor to tell him the exact dates, times and itinerary of her trip to Johannesbu­rg to meet Zuma, during which she landed up at the Guptas’ Saxonwold compound.

The detective asked for detailed informatio­n about the car that picked her up from the airport, a copy of her invitation letter from the presidency, names of those present in the meetings she attended, and who said what.

“All the above-mentioned informatio­n [was] requested from Ms Mentor on several occasions and she failed to provide such. She was given more than one chance to make the informatio­n available, without success,” said a junior detective on the case.

Hawks spokespers­on Hangwani Mulaudzi refused to comment on the investigat­ions, saying “we do not conduct our investigat­ions via the media”.

City Press has establishe­d that last week, the Hawks asked the FIC to provide the unit with detailed and specific informatio­n about the Gupta family’s alleged suspicious transactio­ns.

This took place at a meeting in Pretoria on May 23 — before the news of the #GuptaLeaks email scandal broke. Present at the meeting were officials from the SA Reserve Bank (Sarb), the FIC and the Hawks.

They met to discuss the FIC’s certificat­e, attached to the court applicatio­n brought by then finance minister Pravin Gordhan, seeking confirmati­on that he could not interfere with the country’s banks that closed the Guptas’ bank accounts.

The report showed 72 suspicious transactio­ns totalling more than R6 billion. — AFP

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