Sunday Times

Krejcir ‘hit man’ foiled by Obama

Self-confessed hired gun tells of assassinat­ion attempt in Czech Republic as deadly drug war between Cape and Gauteng gangs escalates

- STAFF REPORTERS

A HIT man who claims he was hired by Czech fugitive Radovan Krejcir to kill an old enemy in Prague had his plans scuppered by US President Barack Obama’s visit to the city.

This assassinat­ion attempt was one of six “overseas hits” it is claimed were ordered by the controvers­ial Krejcir from his mansion in Bedfordvie­w, east of Johannesbu­rg, since he first arrived in South Africa under a false name in 2007.

The Sunday Times has obtained documents that include a sworn statement from the hired gunman, as well as a list of targets to be killed in Germany, the Seychelles and the Czech Republic in 2009.

Born in Greece, the hit man, whose name is known to this newspaper, has lived in South Africa for 40 years. In his statement, which is in the possession of the Hawks, he claims Kre-

There was another complicati­on. The US president, Obama, was visiting the Czech Republic at that time and the security was very high. There were roadblocks all over the place

jcir arranged several trips for him to the Czech Republic and it was during the last one, in early April 2009, that he aborted the mission owing to Obama’s visit, because security personnel were crawling all over the city.

“There was another complicati­on. The US president, Obama, was visiting the Czech Republic at that time and the security was very high. There were constant roadblocks all over the place,” he says.

In any event, the hit man claims, the gun and silencer that he and an accomplice had collected in Prague for the hit did not work.

In his statement, made in Spain in May 2011, the hired gun says Krejcir was livid that the mission had failed.

“Radovan said he could not un- derstand why we could not do the job. He said anyone can walk into a McDonald’s and shoot someone and walk out, with the job done,” he said.

The millionair­e businessma­n is fighting extraditio­n to the Czech Republic where he has been sentenced to several jail terms in absentia. Suspicion concerning his role in several unsolved murders keeps cropping up as dead bodies pile up around South Africa.

Krejcir has been linked to the murders of strip club boss Lolly Jackson, German supercar tycoon Uwe Gemballa and underworld figure Cyril Beeka.

He survived an assassinat­ion attempt in July, and on Tuesday night his pawn shop in Bedfordvie­w was blown up.

Several people interviewe­d this week suggested the explosion was a sign of a drug “turf war” being waged between Krejcir and some powerful Cape Town-based characters.

According to claims, Krejcir, controvers­ial Cape Town businessma­n Mark Lifman and Cape Town underworld figure Jerome “Donkey” Booysen have ordered hits on each other.

“That bomb had Krejcir’s name on it. That bomb came from the Cape. It was meant to take Krejcir out and destroy his hold on the drug distributi­on in Joburg,” a source said.

The Sunday Times was told the feud escalated after Krejcir tried to expand his network to Cape Town in 2011. It is now being claimed that Cape Town underworld bosses are set on moving into Gauteng.

Lifman said he would not comment and Booysen did not reply to requests seeking his comment.

Hawks spokesman Captain Paul Ramaloko said “seasoned detectives” were working on the unsolved murders. He said he could not comment on the statement by the selfconfes­sed hit man before the matter went to court.

Asked about the feud between Krejcir and the Cape Town figures, Ramaloko said: “We are approachin­g these cases with an open mind.”

The hit man’s statement includes a printout with the names of his tar-

Radovan said he could not understand why we could not do the job. He said anyone can walk into a McDonald’s and shoot someone and walk out, with the job done

gets. One of them, Czech engineer Frantisek Pivoda, is said to owe Krejcir money.

Speaking to the Sunday Times from Prague, Pivoda said he knew Krejcir, but he would not comment on the reported threats.

“Yes, I know Krejcir because we were in business 15 years ago. He is ill . . . as in something in his head,” he said in broken English.

The hit man’s statement also named Krejcir’s mother, Nadezda Krejcirova.

He says: “I met once more with Krejcir’s mother in South Africa. We got into a conversati­on about the weapon, the Scorpion, and why it

would not work. She said words to the effect that she was tired of digging this gun up in her garden for him, yet he did not manage to do anything with it.”

Krejcir refused to comment, but issued a blanket denial on Friday: “I want to categorica­lly state that I have had no involvemen­t in any of the killings that the media have been so freely speculatin­g about.”

Czech tax-dodger Jan Charvat died in Tuesday’s bomb blast, along with South African Ronny Bvuma, whom Krejcir had employed to replace his wife, Katerina Krejcirova, as a director of various companies.

This, investigat­ors believe, was an attempt to hide his assets from the South African Revenue Service, which served Krejcir with a preservati­on order on Friday.

Police spokesman Brigadier Neville Malila said three people injured in the blast remained in hospital in a serious condition, but the police would not release their names. The Hawks confirmed that Krejcir’s business manager Ivan Savov, who was injured in Tuesday’s bombing, was arrested on Thursday and is scheduled to appear in court tomorrow.

The statements from the hit man and another hired gunman were obtained by forensic investigat­or Paul O’Sullivan, who has been pursuing Krejcir for the past five years and continues to investigat­e his apparent links to murders, fraud and money laundering. O’Sullivan said the investigat­ion formed part of his company’s “pro bono” work.

“I have travelled extensivel­y to get these statements and it became a global investigat­ion. The sooner this man leaves our shores the better,” he said.

 ??  ?? TARGET? Radovan Krejcir at his Bedfordvie­w home in 2010
TARGET? Radovan Krejcir at his Bedfordvie­w home in 2010

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