South Africa

DAYS OF ZONDO

Zondo sinks Zuma spy boss’s efforts to torpedo the State Capture Inquiry

Zondo sinks Zuma spy boss’s efforts to torpedo the State Capture Inquiry
From left: Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo. (Photo: Gallo Images / Veli Nhlapo) | Former spy boss Arthur Fraser. (Photo: Gallo Images / Netwerk24 / Jaco Marais)

Former State Security Agency director-general Arthur Fraser’s application to cross-examine witnesses about the looting of intelligence coffers has been dismissed by commission chairpersoJudge Raymond Zondo.

Judge Raymond Zondo has dismissed former spy boss Arthur Fraser’s application to cross-examine four witnesses who exposed the looting of intelligence coffers and the politicisation of the State Security Agency (SSA) to serve former president Jacob Zuma’s personal interests.

“I can see no reason why it is in the public interest to grant the right to the cross-examination of witnesses. It stands to be dismissed and is so dismissed,” said Zondo, who is the chairperson of the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture. The commission has to complete its report by 31 December, when its term expires.

Zondo said Fraser’s application had failed on several grounds:

  • He had declined a request by the commission’s investigators to co-operate in an investigation, but went public saying that his information would blow the lid on three arms of the state. Judge Zondo said if Fraser had evidence of wrongdoing, he should have brought it forward a long time ago rather than wait until the last minute.
  • He did not follow up on a March 2021 agreement with two acting directors-general of the SSA to provide him with the documents he wanted to be declassified.

The two were former acting DG Loyiso Jafta, who gave explosive testimony of how the intelligence services had been captured and corrupted, and the acting DG Gab Msimanga. Jafta is now the DG of the correctional services department.

Jafta and Msimanga had set conditions, including that Fraser had to be specific in which documents he required; had to agree to peruse them on-site; had to determine the relevance to the commission of the documents he wanted; and had to agree that certain information might be redacted.

Fraser and his attorneys had failed to respond to the two acting DGs who offered to help him. Instead, he launched an application against the SSA.  The judge questioned his motive for the legal grandstanding when the SSA had already said it was willing to give him the documents he wanted under certain conditions.

“Why did the applicant’s (Fraser’s) attorneys not respond and accept Jafta’s invitation to obtain the documents?” Zondo asked in his ruling.

Fraser had been warned that he could not be guaranteed oral testimony. He had started his application late in the day after refusing a request to investigate with the commission. Zondo said Fraser had left the commission unsure of what was going on, even though he had been granted an opportunity to file a late affidavit, after securing the agreement of the SSA to give him the documents.

The commission wrote to him, but by the end of July he had still not responded and had failed to do so even at the point when the judge dismissed his application to cross-examine the witnesses.

Fraser has submitted his own affidavits, but these fell far short of complying with the commission’s rules of evidence, Zondo said. He had made a broad affidavit rather than a specific one detailing which parts of the evidence he disagreed with and why.

The commission heard testimony from national security adviser Sydney Mufamadi, then acting DG of the SSA Loyiso Jafta and former spy bosses Jeff Maqetuka, Mo Shaik and Gibson Njenje.

Jafta — as well as two witnesses who were not named — revealed how an estimated R9-billion was looted by the SSA and used to prop up the Zuma regime.

Maqetuka, Shaik and Njenje gave testimony that revealed they had been fired for warning that the Gupta family’s relationship with Zuma was a threat to the national interest.

Mufamadi chaired a high-level panel into intelligence which found that the doctrinal shift in intelligence — where agents swore allegiance to the president — allowed the erosion and capture of the SSA under Zuma.

Fraser opposed the October 2021 nomination of Zondo for the position of chief justice, but the commission refuted his allegations. Fraser also laid perjury charges against six witnesses who appeared before the Zondo Commission earlier in 2021.

In 2018, Fraser was appointed national commissioner of correctional services by President Ramaphosa. In 2021, he overrode a decision by the medical parole board and granted Zuma an early exit from prison where he had just begun a 15-month sentence on contempt charges. That decision is being contested in court. DM

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Dennis Bailey says:

    Too late for truth until it’s not. Sorry, Mister crooked Fraser you missed your moment. Again.

  • Trevor Pope says:

    I would love to know why uncle Cyril doesn’t just remove Fraser from his position before he does more damage.

  • JOHN TOWNSEND says:

    nasty piece of work. Love to know where he was during the July uprising. Should be investigated but wont because the family are ANC cadres. Remember his sister, Fraser Moleketi one-time cabinet minister. His whole family it is rumoured was on the payroll of the SSA.

  • David Bristow says:

    Never forget, they are all struggle comrades, and only now does the real battle begin: to keep the party in power that commands only 50 % of the votes. We ain’t seen it all yet.

  • Sandra Goldberg says:

    Still unanswered questions about Fraser- why did Cyril Ramaphosa , in his cabinet reshuffle not give him the boot with all these things already common knowledge , but instead place him at the head of Correctional Services?This of course came in very handy with Jacob Zuma’s medical parole, where Fraser overrode the parole board and granted the former freedom. Was this part of Ramaphosa’s “long game”? And if so , what else can we expect in efforts to maintainANC“party unity”?

    • Charles Parr says:

      It seems that you’ve answered your own question. It suits CR very well to have Fraser there as he didn’t have to face the music for JZ’s release.

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