08 December 2024 | 09:16 PM

The memo that sank the arms probe

Key Takeaways

A six-page memo littered with contradictions and inaccuracies informed the decision to end the probe into the multibillion-rand arms deal.

 

Hawks head Anwa Dramat’s decision last year to close the decade-long investigation led to an outcry from anticorruption campaigners and opposition parties.

 

The apparent flimsiness of the reasoning underlying his decision is reflected in an internal memorandum, which was submitted to Dramat on September 14, a week before he pulled the plug.

 

Download the memo

 

When shown the memo, arms deal campaigner Richard Young charged: “The president and his ministers all preach the good fight against corruption. Here are cases that are eminently winnable after having been investigated in great depth and at great cost, but clearly prosecution was not an option as they involved luminaries close to the president.”

 

 

Democratic Alliance MP David Maynier recently obtained the memo from the police under the Promotion of Access to Information Act. He had applied for “all documentation relating to the decision to cancel the investigations” after the Mail & Guardian revealed Dramat’s decision last October. He was given no further documents. “It’s hard to believe that this poorly drafted six-page memorandum formed the basis of the decision to close the investigation into the arms deal,” said Maynier.

 

The Hawks did not respond to detailed questions, but spokesperson McIntosh Polela played down the significance of the memo to the decision. “It is merely an internal discussion document summarising the main points of concern. It obviously does not provide for various consultations that took place about the facts and the merits of the decision to close the investigation.”

 

But the question remains whether the “consultations” would have been of greater quality if the written “summary” had not been so poor.

 

Hawks commercial crime head Hans Meiring submitted the memo to Dramat to recommend closing the probe. Meiring’s involvement is explained by the fact that Johan du Plooy, the veteran — and by then only — investigator allocated to the probe, reported to him. Du Plooy did not agree with Dramat’s decision, according to third party reports.

 

 

The decision closed the investigation’s last two active legs, which also happened to be among the most explosive. The BAE Systems leg rested on evidence that the British arms firm had paid more than R1-billion in “commissions” to, among others, late defence minister Joe Modise’s adviser, Fana Hlongwane. The German Frigate Consortium (GFC) leg included allegations of a R20-million kickback to Chippy Shaik, then head of defence procurement.

 

Hlongwane remains a confidant of senior ANC leaders. The M&G revealed last year that he financed a R4-million home for Siphiwe Nyanda, now President Jacob Zuma’s parliamentary counsellor, when Nyanda retired as chief of defence in 2005. Nyanda headed the defence force when the arms contracts were signed. Chippy Shaik is the brother of Schabir, Zuma’s former financial adviser, who was convicted of corruption in the arms deal.

 

In broad strokes Meiring’s memo argued that the right to a speedy trial could be compromised by the passage of time since the deal “in the mid-nineteens [sic]”. It also states that companies, witnesses and evidence had disappeared, a proper investigation would be resource-intensive, suspects had already died; parallel foreign investigations had been closed; and it would be difficult to get witnesses and evidence from abroad.

 

Some of the more questionable aspects of Meiring’s memo include:

 

 

 

  • It is highly superficial when measured against the gravity of the decision. The memo does not refer to any specific suspects, witnesses, dates or evidence.

 

  • Meiring’s grasp of the facts is tenuous. He calls BAE Systems “British Eurospace”, presumably after its former name, British Aerospace. His claim that “the transactions relating to [the BAE] investigation refer back to the mid nineteens” [presumably mid-1990s], omits that the arms contracts were signed in December 1999 only and that allegedly corrupt payments flowed until at least 2007.

 

  • Meiring complains about the difficulty of getting foreign evidence, such as financial flows and company documents, while acknowledging that such information was already in the Hawks’s possession after foreign investigators had shared it informally. Although the evidentiary value of informally obtained evidence is decreased, the evidence is known and formal channels remain potentially available.

 

  • Meiring complains about the difficulty of obtaining evidence after years have passed, while admitting the existence of about 4.7-million pages of documents, secured in a 2008 raid on BAE, Hlongwane and others. But this trove he turns into another negative, on the basis that it would require further effort to “peruse and analyse”.

 

  • Meiring argues, contradictorily, that although “cost implications to conduct an investigation cannot be a consideration — it should not be ignored”. He also complains that “a team of dedicate[d] investigators and prosecutors would be required” — although the appointment of such teams is presumably standard in important, complex cases.

 

  • Meiring claims that “the three suspects in the BAE leg have all passed away”. Modise, defence minister during the period of arms procurement, and Richard Charter, one of BAE’s local agents, have both died, but the identity of the third suspect is a mystery. Certainly, Hlongwane — who was regarded as a suspect because he could have influenced the deal as Modise’s adviser and subsequently received more than R200-million in payments from BAE and its partners — is alive and well.

 

  • Meiring claims there is “no prima facie evidence against any person” in the BAE matter, even though a South African judge confirmed an offshore freeze on Hlongwane’s funds as the “proceeds of crime”. Although he has denied wrongdoing, Hlongwane has not denied receiving payments from BAE.

 

  • Meiring dismisses the entire GFC investigation involving Chippy Shaik in three paragraphs tacked on to the end of the document, claiming that “the reason mentioned in the BAE case is also applicable to the German Frigate Consortium case”. This flies in the face of firm evidence.

 

 

Shaik’s alleged R20-million bribe is documented in Thyssen company memorandums obtained in raids by German investigators and informally shared with the South Africans. Thyssen is the lead company in the GFC. In one key memo Thyssen executive Christopher Hoenings recorded that Shaik “asked once again for explicit confirmation [of] the verbal agreement made with him for payment to be made in case of success, to him and a group represented by him, in the amount of $3-million”.

 

 

Further corroborative documentation is understood to include an instruction in which Shaik allegedly nominated accountant Ian Pierce to receive the payment.

 

German magazine Der Spiegel reported two years ago that Merian Ltd, an offshore company represented by Pierce, received $3-million in April 2000, the same month that South Africa paid the GFC the first instalment on navy vessels ordered from it.

 

The M&G subsequently identified at least some flow — five payments totalling roughly R500 000 — from Merian Ltd to a South African bank account held by Pierce.

 

Whereas the police have now disclosed the Meiring memo to the DA’s Maynier, Parliament’s standing committee on public accounts, which ordered the arms probe in 2000, remains in the dark. Scopa chair Themba Godi said last week that after the news of Dramat’s decision “I did a formal letter to [the Hawks] and they did not bother to respond”.

 

Godi later contacted police national commissioner Bheki Cele, who said he would “talk to them”, but still got no response. Maynier said he would hand a copy of the memo to Godi so that Scopa could probe Dramat’s decision.

 

 

The M&G Centre for Investigative Journalism, supported by M&G Media and the Open Society Foundation for South Africa, produced this story. All views are the centre’s. www.amabhungane.co.za.

 

 

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amaBhungane

Before joining the amaBhungane team in 2017, Micah was the national coordinator for media freedom and diversity at the Right2Know Campaign. He holds a Masters in African Studies from Oxford University and a BA Honours in History from Wits University.

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