The Star Early Edition

Armed man tries to sneak into indaba

- SHAIN GERMANER shain.germaner@inl.co.za

THE SAPS Crime Intelligen­ce Unit has been brought in to investigat­e why an armed man who works for a security company tried to sneak into the ANC national general council over the weekend by impersonat­ing a police officer.

On Saturday afternoon, the 37year-old arrived at the Midrand conference trying to gain entry without accreditat­ion.

“When police questioned him about the accreditat­ion, he produced a police appointmen­t certificat­e and was also found in possession of a firearm. Police arrested him for impersonat­ing a police officer and later establishe­d that he was working for a security company in Centurion,” said provincial police spokeswoma­n Brigadier Mashadi Selepe yesterday.

“It was later establishe­d that the police appointmen­t certificat­e was false, while the firearm belonged to a security company where he’s employed, even though he wasn’t in possession of a permit,” she added.

While police have remained mum about their theories as to what the man intended to do if he managed to get inside, Selepe confirmed that the Crime Intelligen­ce Unit would now be investigat­ing the matter.

She was unwilling to name the security company where the man works, saying it was unnecessar­y to tarnish the name of the company based on the personal actions of one of its employees.

The man will be charged with possession of a firearm without a permit, in terms of the Firearms Control Act, and impersonat­ing a police officer. He was expected to appear in the Midrand Magistrate’s Court this morning.

No comment could be acquired from the ANC yesterday.

Saturday’s incident comes nearly three years after several men were arrested for plotting to fire a mortar bomb at the entrance of the ANC’s Mangaung conference venue, held at the University of the Free State in December 2012.

The idea had been to wipe out the ANC leadership, including President Jacob Zuma, but a joint operation between police and the Hawks thwarted those plans.

The mastermind behind the plot, Mark Trollip, entered into a plea bargain with the State and received an eight-year sentence, while another man, Johan Prinsloo, was convicted of high treason in November last year. He is serving a 13-year jail term.

One of the men who had been arrested along with Prinsloo on December 16, 2012 had charges against him withdrawn, while another one, Martin Keevy, was declared unfit to stand trial.

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