Sunday Tribune

Minister d iscloses ‘Bosasa’ past

Evidence placed before Justice Zondo has prompted Nosiviwe Mapisa-nqakula to account for her role

- LOYISO SIDIMBA loyiso.sidimba.inl.co.za

DEFENCE Minister Nosiviwe Mapisanqak­ula has admitted that she was one of the founders of Dyambu Holdings, later to become Bosasa, following evidence this week at the commission of inquiry into state capture.

The company’s former chief operations officer, Angelo Agrizzi, told the commission headed by Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo that senior ANC leaders such as Mapisanqak­ula and Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Minister Lindiwe Sisulu, who are both members of the ANC’S national executive committee, were among the shareholde­rs of Dyambu Holdings.

Agrizzi said former national director of public prosecutio­ns Vusi Pikoli’s wife, Girly Pikoli, was also a shareholde­r.

Mapisa-nqakula’s spokespers­on, Joy Peter, yesterday said she was one of the co-founders of Dyambu Holdings but never received any dividends.

Peter said Mapisa-nqakula declared her directorsh­ip in Parliament’s register of members’ interests.

The commission also heard that Bosasa boss Gavin Watson showered Sapo’s former head of security and Mapisa-nqakula’s brother, Siviwe Mapisa, and the Post Office’s former chief executive, Maanda Manyatshe, with expensive, premier gifts including luxury Cartier and Monte Blanc pens as well as cufflinks and fake watches.

Documents obtained by Independen­t Media show that Mapisa has a trust that was registered in 2007 in which Watson’s brother, Valence Watson, is a trustee along with Armscor chief executive Kevin Wakeford.

Sisulu has denied she was ever a shareholde­r or director of Dyambu Holdings and has demanded that Agrizzi correct his statement in public and at the commission.

Former SABC chief operating officer-turned-politician Hlaudi Motsoeneng has called on more people to pay for the legal fees of the “saviour of South Africa” directly to his lawyers just as Bosasa did in August 2017.

“Those who want to assist Hlaudi are welcome to assist Hlaudi,” he said, adding that everyone including journalist­s could assist.

Motsoeneng was among several high-profile individual­s implicated by Agrizzi in his testimony at the commission of inquiry into state capture this week.

Agrizzi testified at the commission that Bosasa paid almost R1.2 million in two tranches to settle Motsoeneng’s legal bill in August 2017.

It emerged late last year in an affidavit by former Bosasa auditor and tax consultant Peet Viljoen that Walter Jele from the law firm that represente­d Motsoeneng, Zola Majavu Attorneys, sent an invoice for over R1.18m and the bill was settled through payment of R600 000 and just over R587 000 in two days in August 2017.

But Motsoeneng yesterday dismissed the payments as a non-issue, saying that at the time he no longer worked for the SABC and that Bosasa never benefited at all during his time at the public broadcaste­r.

“There is nothing wrong about the payment, nothing untoward. They are just trying to discredit myself and my party,” he said.

Motsoeneng recently launched his own political party, the African Content Movement, which will contest the elections later this year.

He said that Bosasa should answer questions on why it paid his legal fees.

On Friday, Justice Zondo announced that the commission’s secretary, Dr Khotso de Wee, had voluntaril­y taken special leave following revelation­s by Agrizzi that he was allegedly paid a bribe by Bosasa to award the company a lucrative tender to provide security to courts across the country.

De Wee was the chief operations officer of the Department of Justice and Constituti­onal Developmen­t in 2013 when the contract was awarded to Bosasa.

Justice Zondo will announce the commission’s acting secretary on Tuesday.

 ??  ?? NOSIVIWE MAPISA-NQAKULA
NOSIVIWE MAPISA-NQAKULA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa