The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Thabo Mbeki factor in Mandela trial

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CAPE TOWN. - Former deputy and later president Thabo Mbeki was aware of the allegedly dubious background of an investigat­or appointed to probe the presidenti­al investigat­ive task unit created on former president Nelson Mandela’s orders.

Major- General Andre Lincoln submitted this in his testimony before t he Western Cape High Court on Monday.

He went on to say that apartheid- era police officers were poor investigat­ors.

“There are very, very few, if any, highly skilled investigat­ors that came out of the old South African police,” Lincoln testified under cross- examinatio­n.

“What I know is t hat t hey were good at setting you up.”

In 1996, Mandela tasked Lincoln with heading up a presidenti­al investigat­ive unit to probe Cape Town- based Italian mafioso Vito Palazzolo and his links to government officials, police and businessme­n.

But criminal allegation­s against Lincoln and others in the unit then surfaced.

In August 1997, Lincoln therefore met Mbeki, who was t hen deputy president, and then-national police commission­er George Fivaz.

Lincoln yesterday testified that at that point, it had already been decided that policeman Leonard Knipe would head a probe into the presidenti­al task unit.

Fivaz, according to Lincoln, had ordered this.

“I had nothing to hide,” Lincoln said, adding that was why he had not objected to Knipe’s appointmen­t to probe the presidenti­al unit.

It was put to Lincoln that Knipe was chosen because of his objectivit­y and good investigat­ive skills.

But this prompted Lincoln to testify that apartheid- era police had generally not been good investigat­ors.

Last week, he testified that members of the apartheid- era security police swept the scenes after the bombing of Community House in Salt River in 1997 and the killing of the so- called Gugulethu Seven in 1986.

Lincoln said that Knipe was aware of what he knew and was among a group of police officers who went out of their way to tarnish his name.

Yesterday, Lincoln testified t hat Mbeki knew about this as he had been briefed on it.

“The deputy president was well aware of the agendas… He agreed with the investigat­ion (into the presidenti­al task unit) if done for the right reasons...

“All the deputy president said to Commission­er Fivaz is: ‘ I hope you’re doing this for the right reasons.’”

Lincoln said he discussed his reservatio­ns about the probe into the presidenti­al unit three times.

“I spoke to the deputy president about it. He said to me: ‘ Let the investigat­ion run its course.’”

“I told him witnesses were being pressurise­d to make statements.”

Lincoln said t wo off icers - an Advocate Joubert who headed up the police’s legal services, as well as a Director Human - had also travelled from Pretoria to Cape Town to tell Palazzolo that Lincoln was not his friend, which had been Lincoln’s cover to get access to the mafioso.

“That was because Mr Knipe convinced [Palazzolo] to make a statement [against me].”

Lincoln was previously arrested on an array of charges linked to Palazzolo.

He was l ater acquitted on t he charges.

This is why Lincoln is now claiming R15m in damages from the minister of safety and security (now the minister of police) for what he has termed “malicious prosecutio­n”.

Yesterday, he testified that investigat­ors had played a role in the decision to have him prosecuted.

“It was malice; personal hatred that drove this prosecutio­n.”

The civil case continues.

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