Sunday Times

Fraser hits back with spy claims

- By CAIPHUS KGOSANA

● Former spy boss Arthur Fraser claims former apartheid spies incorporat­ed into post1994 intelligen­ce structures sold fake informatio­n to ANC politician­s, including former presidents, to sow division in the state.

The claim is contained in Fraser’s 78-page response to the damning findings of the high-level review panel on the State Security Agency (SSA), led by former minister and academic Sydney Mufamadi.

The panel found that during Jacob Zuma’s presidency, when Fraser headed the agency, it was used to fight factional battles and illegally spy on Zuma’s political opponents.

It also tore into the Principal Agent Network (PAN), a covert operation started by Fraser that was allegedly a front for the former spy chief’s family members and close associates, among others, to loot millions of rands in state resources.

In April last year, two months after taking office, President Cyril Ramaphosa moved Fraser from his position as director-general of the SSA to the same post in the department of correction­al services.

Responding to Mufamadi’s findings, Fraser claims to have intercepte­d plans by former spies, working with other apartheid operatives engaged in private intelligen­ce work and foreign spies, to undermine the ANC and the post-apartheid government.

He says the plotters concocted imaginary threats and risks, then suggested solutions on how to curb them, for a fee.

The individual­s involved are said to have included former members of the special branch, the National Intelligen­ce Service, the military and police intelligen­ce.

“As they had access to public officials, their modus operandi was to create a need for their services by, among others, producing and then releasing informatio­n about this or the other threat, or risk,” Fraser writes.

“Thereafter they would approach the relevant mandated public institutio­n, or department, or ministry, and propose a solution to the threat or risk, at the same time indicating their capacity to assist in the provision of the solution etcetera at a cost — as they charge for their services.

“They even work for foreign intelligen­ce services inside and outside the border of [SA] for money.”

According to Fraser, the fake “intelligen­ce” that emanated from these informatio­n peddlers included:

● A report by former defence chief Gen Georg Meiring in the 1990s that warned of a plot to overthrow then-president Nelson Mandela;

● A report that surfaced from James Nkambule in the early 2000s, alleging a plot by Ramaphosa (then in business) and struggle heavyweigh­ts Mathews Phosa and Tokyo Sexwale to overthrow then-president Thabo Mbeki; and

● A report by rogue spy Bheki Jacobs that alleged that Zuma, then deputy president of SA and the ANC, was working with apartheid-era agents to overthrow Mbeki.

Fraser says the apartheid spies-turnedinfo­rmation peddlers used their access to senior ANC politician­s to undermine SA.

“So we may say that informatio­n-peddlers are nation-wreckers consisting of individual­s, or groups, or private intelligen­ce, or private security firms that provide unsolicite­d informatio­n, or intelligen­ce, that is not verified and whose source(s) may not be ascertaine­d,” he says.

Fraser says he started the PAN to flush out these former spies, and accuses review panel members of serving factional ANC interests.

Review panel chair Mufamadi declined to comment on Fraser’s response. He said Ramaphosa had already accepted the report and the former spy boss was merely “contributi­ng to the national discourse”. Fraser could not be reached for comment.

Nation-wreckers … provide unsolicite­d informatio­n, or intelligen­ce, that is not verified

Arthur Fraser

Former State Security Agency head

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