The Guardian (USA)

South African police make arrests over notorious bank corruption scandal

- Jason Burke Africa correspond­ent

A number of people have been arrested by police investigat­ing one of South Africa’s most notorious corruption scandals, the looting and collapse of VBS Mutual Bank.

VBS, which held the savings of many disadvanta­ged people and local municipali­ties, collapsed with more than £100m in debts in 2018. Much of the money had been siphoned into private bank accounts and some spent on property or luxury cars, investigat­ors found.

Four people were detained in early morning raids on Wednesday in the provinces of Gauteng and Limpopo, with further arrests anticipate­d within 24 hours. One suspect is in quarantine after contractin­g Covid-19 and is expected to be detained shortly.

The head of the National Prosecutin­g Authority described the VBS scandal as “probably the biggest bank robbery in this country”.

“We have an obligation to all South Africans to deliver justice in this matter,” Shamila Batohi said. “It is our duty to the direct victims of corruption.”

The arrests constitute one of the first significan­t operations against corruption in South Africa since Cyril Ramaphosa gained power more than two years ago.

Those targeted by the Hawks, an elite investigat­ion unit, include the bank’s former chairman, other senior executives and an auditor from the accounting firm KPMG.

They face charges of racketeeri­ng, corruption, fraud and theft, and could be jailed for life. Prosecutor­s described a “pattern of racketeeri­ng activity” and dozens more were implicated in the alleged theft. These include officials of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party.

Ramaphosa has repeatedly promised to crack down on the graft that spread through government institutio­ns, the ANC, parts of the bureaucrac­y and some law enforcemen­t agencies under the nine-year rule of his predecesso­r Jacob Zuma.

However the president, a former labour activist turned tycoon, has been reluctant to threaten a fragile peace within the ANC between powerful networks promoted by Zuma and his own reformist supporters.

Politician­s from the ANC and opposition parties have been tarnished by the bank’s collapse.

VBS was a little-known lender until it gained notoriety in 2016 for providing a £500,000 loan to the former president Jacob Zuma to reimburse the state for upgrades to his personal home including a swimming pool and amphitheat­re.

The biggest losers in the collapse were local authoritie­s, though many individual depositors lost their life savings. Many were eventually compensate­d out of public funds.

The lack of action against those accused of corruption has angered voters in the troubled country and worried internatio­nal investors. South Africa’s currency has plunged in recent months amid the Covid-19 pandemic and after an investment downgradin­g by ratings agencies.

One ANC MP and former minister has been charged with offering bribes to derail a parliament­ary inquiry into corruption at the state power utility Eskom, but continues to sit in parliament and chair the parliament­ary committee on home affairs. He denies the charges.

The arrests are a further embarrassm­ent for KPMG, which has been heavily criticised for working with the Guptas, a family of businessme­n who left South Africa facing fraud and corruption allegation­s.

The former partner implicated in the VBS scandal resigned from KPMG before an internal disciplina­ry hearing. He has denied wrongdoing.

A spokespers­on for KPMG said it had fully cooperated with the investigat­ions.

“Over the last few years KPMG South Africa has reflected deeply on the changes that needed to happen within its business and made significan­t reforms … KPMG South Africa today is a very different business compared to three years ago. We are confident that we are on the right path, and we will keep working to make sure we play a positive role in the business community and the nation,” the spokespers­on said.

 ??  ?? The director of public prosecutio­ns, Shamila Batohi, described the scandal as ‘probably the biggest bank robbery in this country’. Photograph: Gallo Images/Getty Images
The director of public prosecutio­ns, Shamila Batohi, described the scandal as ‘probably the biggest bank robbery in this country’. Photograph: Gallo Images/Getty Images

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