Cape Argus

Sassa witness spills beans

Syndicate member pleads guilty, reveals how impoverish­ed were defrauded

- Gadeeja Abbas STAFF REPORTER gadeeja.abbas@inl.co.za

THE INNER workings of one of South Africa’s biggest social grant fraud syndicates has been revealed after one of the 14 people arrested in the country’s biggest crackdownp­leaded guilty and turned State witness.

Nosipho Majola from Mitchells Plain agreed to testify against the members of a crime syndicate which has defrauded the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) of more than R35 million.

The syndicate targeted vulnerable, impoverish­ed and elderly people by siphoning state grants for self benefit. Eight of the suspected fraud syndicate members were Sassa employees.

The Bellville Specialise­d Commercial Crimes Court sentenced Majola to six years imprisonme­nt, suspended for five years on condition that she was not convicted of corruption during this period of suspension.

Majola was caught red-handed during an undercover operation by the province’s Anti-Corruption Task Team.

The mother of three offered an undercover agent R12500 after he agreed to fraudulent­ly register IDs and arrange for Sassa banking cards.

In June last year, officials based at Sassa’s Matlotsane and Tlokwe offices in the North West Province discovered fraud indicators which led to an investigat­ion. Although the grants were captured, verified and approved in the North West Province, the issuing of the Sassa cards was done in the Western Cape while withdrawal­s were made in KwaZulu-Natal.

This led to 19 Cash Paymaster Services (CPS) officials being dismissed after disciplina­ry hearings were held. CPS is a service provider employed by Sassa to distribute grant payments to beneficiar­ies.

The dismissal of the CPS employees created a situation where it became critical for members of the syndicate to recruit new CPS officials into the fold.

A woman approached a CPS employee and confessed to him that she was part of a syndicate operating from KwaZuluNat­al and that she was looking to recruit. The woman told the employee – who later became an agent for police –she expected him to load Sassa cards and she would WEDNESDAY JUNE 22 2016 provide details of the beneficiar­ies.

The agent, who will testify for the State, was contacted by one of the co-accused, Nombuyisel­o Sigcau from the Eastern Cape.

Sigcau arranged she would meet the agent in the Western Cape in February to hand over 50 IDs which had to be fraudulent­ly registered. The agent would then be paid with 20 of the cards as payment.

After the agent was paid by the syndicate at Cape Town Internatio­nal Airport, police swooped and arrested them. The cash handover was caught on camera and formed part of the State’s evidence.

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