The Hawks, The NPA And The Rogue Unit Reporters
On 4 January, Acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo handed the first part of the State Capture report to President Cyril Ramaphosa.
Written by: Ed Herbst
The SARS evidence is a clear example of how the private sector colluded with the Executive, including President Zuma, to capture an institution that was highly regarded internationally and render it ineffective. SARS’ investigatory and enforcement capacity presented a hurdle to those involved in organised crime, and was, therefore, a target for those engaged in state capture. The involvement of the media in perpetuating false narratives which discredited targeted people as well as providing grounds for their removal was a notable feature of the evidence led in regard to the capture of SARS.
Point 321 Page 711 of the Zondo Commission’s first report.
"[Focus should] not just be on the theft and personal enrichment, but the actual destruction of state capacity, in that the state institutions which were world class, were incapacitated, were destroyed so that they couldn’t perform those functions. I think it is absolutely essential that we see real consequences for that and that prosecutions are brought.”
Nicole Fritz – Helen Suzman Foundation News 24 17/1/2022
The NPA and the Hawks have established a special task team to investigate the first Zondo report findings.
In this they are backed by Business Unity SA (BUSA) and Business Leadership South Africa (BLSA) and Cosatu and Saftu who want to see the prosecution of those who facilitated state capture expedited.
This special task team cannot ignore the media role in the evisceration of SARS, something stressed and emphasised in the first Zondo Commission report.
On 4 January, Acting Chief Justice Raymond Zondo handed the first part of the State Capture report to President Cyril Ramaphosa.
It comes as no surprise that it identifies former President Jacob Zuma as the architect and main driver of state capture during the ‘nine wasted years’ of his tenure as leader of the African National Congress.
He is mentioned more than 150 times and he features in 92 pages of the 874-page first section of the report.
From a media perspective, the finding by the Commission that Zuma had collaborated with the private sector in general and the media in particular to eviscerate SARS of its crime investigation capabilities also comes as no surprise because that has long been an accepted truth by the South African public.
As the Zondo hearings revealed, Tom Moyane was the man selected by Zuma to nullify the SARS investigation of his income tax avoidance.
On pages 663 and 664 of the report, the Commission says that within weeks of taking control in September 2014, Moyane, had started his purge of the senior staff by forcing out the Chief Operations Officer, Barry Hore and, in a few months thereafter, other senior executives became his victims:
Johann van Loggerenberg - Group Executive: Enforcement Investigations;
Adrian Lackay – Spokesman for SARS;
Ivan Pillay - Acting Commissioner;
Peter Richer – Acting Chief Officer – Strategic Planning and Risk;
Gene Ravele - Chief Officer – Tax and Customs Enforcement Investigations.
Within a year he had ripped the heart out of a world-class tax compliance enforcement team and he leveraged the lies of a three-man Sunday Times team and more than 30 ‘Rogue Unit’ articles – all devoid of truth - to do so.
The adverse impact on SARS was immense.
Here are the Commission’s findings about the ‘Rogue Unit’ lies, lies for which that newspaper subsequently apologised as did one of the former members of the team.
The Zondo report details how Tom Moyane used this corrupt reporting, subsequently discounted in a series of court judgments - see here and here and here and here - to victimise the ethical gatekeepers at SARS to the detriment of their continued employment and the functioning of the organisation:
In addition, two weeks after taking over in September 2014, Mr Moyane disbanded SARS’s entire Executive Committee on the basis of an apparent Sunday Times exposé about a so called “Rogue Unit”. The “Rogue Unit” saga was hugely damaging to SARS and many of its people.
Point 159 Page 664
In what he described as the final attack, Mr van Loggerenberg told the Commission that a dossier appeared on 12th October 2014 alleging that senior investigators at SARS, located in the SPU, were part of what was styled a “rogue unit”, a label to which Mr van Loggerenberg took grave exception. Among other things it was said that members of the Rogue Unit were illegally spying on President Jacob Zuma and that they had bugged his home. Poor journalism at the Sunday Times allowed these allegations to appear in more than 30 articles published between August 2014 and April 2016. They have since been retracted
Point 202 Page 674
The tenor of these allegations, which were published as fact, were that the Rogue Unit members had broken into the former President’s home and following this, listening devices had been found in his home.
Point 203 Page 675
Mr Moyane never questioned the veracity of these claims. In fact, Mr van Loggerenberg said that the attacks on SARS and the specific individuals implicated suited him perfectly. He immediately began to target SARS management by suspending the Executive Committee in November 2014 following the “fake news” about the brothels being run by SARS
Point 204 Page 675
Despite the serious allegations appearing in the Sunday Times over an extended period of time and allegations being made against senior officials within SARS, Mr Moyane never approached any of those officials against whom allegations were made in the press to establish their response to the allegations. This was strange behaviour on Mr Moyane’s part as the Commissioner of SARS because, it would be expected that, if he knew nothing about the allegations in those articles, he would have raised the issue with the individuals concerned. One would not have expected him as the leader of SARS, concerned with the image and reputation of SARS to just keep quiet when there were so many articles in newspapers which were negative about SARS. The fact that he kept quiet suggests that he knew well where the allegations were coming from. In addition, despite the institution being under significant attack, there was no response from SARS itself. That, too was strange behaviour on Mr Moyane’s part.
Point 205 Page 675
The six members of the SARS High-Risk Investigations Unit (the so- called “rogue unit”) wrote to Mr Moyane and other senior SARS officials on 16 October 2014. They indicated that all the claims in the newspaper were false, and they requested that an investigation be initiated. There was a number of requests which they made to Mr Moyane, including that SARS bring legal action against the Sunday Times. They offered to be polygraphed and made other suggestions aimed at demonstrating their innocence.
Point 206 Page 676
Instead of engaging with the implicated people who called for his assistance, Mr Moyane used the reports instead to launch an investigation into “rogue” activities at SARS and to suspend the former Acting Commissioner, Mr Ivan Pillay, as well as most of the agency’s investigative staff, led by Mr van Loggerenberg. A large number of people was affected.
Point 207 Page 676
The sequel to the Rogue Unit saga is that each and every component of what turned out to be the false narrative in relation to the High-Risk Investigative Unit has been dismantled and there have been definitive judicial findings in respect thereof. The Sunday Times withdrew their allegations unconditionally and issued an apology. Mr van Loggerenberg said that the newspaper also admitted that they had been used as part of a project to cause harm to state institutions
Point 208 Page 676
Most significantly, the Full Bench of the Gauteng Division of the High Court handed down a judgment in 2020 in relation to the lawfulness of the unit. The court said it could “…find no factual or legal basis upon which it can be concluded that the establishment of the unit was unlawful.”
Point 209 Page 676
The Zondo Commission has called for Tom Moyane to be prosecuted for perjury.
The role of the Sunday Times ‘Rogue Unit’ reporters was pivotal – vital – in making the subsequent purge of senior SARS executives possible and Moyane has acknowledged this himself. In the absence of this pro-state capture fake news propaganda, by these reporters what pretext would he have had for his mendacious conduct?
Along with Bain, they were significant enablers of corruption in a full-frontal attack on democracy.
We are indebted to Anton Harber for his research, reflected in his 2020 book So, for the Record – Behind the Headlines in an Era of Sate Capture, in which he showed (page 235) how Moyane had leaked a watermarked and confidential summary of the interim and subsequently withdrawn KPMG ‘ SARS spy unit’ report – one of only eight – to Piet Rampedi, the current editor of the Pretoria News.
And whose name was on Rampedi’s copy? Who was the origin of the abbreviated version he received? It was Tom Moyane himself. That was confirmed for me by someone who saw Rampedi’s photo of it with the watermark. It indicated that Zuma’s appointee as the new SARS commissioner who was systematically attacking the ‘rogue unit’ and using the Sunday Times reporting to dismantle SAR’s investigative capability, was working hand in glove with members of the Sunday Times investigations unit.
Harber’s evidence that Moyane was ‘working hand in glove with members of the Sunday Times investigations unit’ has never been challenged or denied and the conclusions reached by the Zondo Commission provide verifying proof of his claim.
Two members of that team, Piet Rampedi and Mzilikazi wa Afrika were employed by Iqbal Survé in April 2019 and Rampedi was appointed editor of the Pretoria News in January last year.
‘Gross actions of corruption’
After receiving the first Zondo Commission report on 5 January, President Cyril Ramaphosa issued a statement calling on all South Africans to accept its findings and to ‘rid our country of the gross actions of corruption we have seen in the past.’
We have a collective responsibility to ensure that the findings and recommendations of the Commission not only mark a decisive break with the corrupt practices of the past, but that they provide the foundation for greater transparency, accountability and ethical conduct within all state institutions and across society.
Furthermore, in response to the report, Corruption Watch has called for accountability.
Excoriating denunciation
I would argue that the Zondo Commission’s excoriating denunciation of the odious Sunday Times ‘brothel’ reporters’ role in state capture makes it clear that never again can they be regarded as credible employees by any news organisation of stature and repute.
All of this is a matter of profound public interest given how the Sunday Times ‘Rogue Unit’ reporting adversely impacted on all of us:
To the benefit of criminal syndicates, hundreds of dedicated and technically qualified staff members left SARS as a result of the nefarious collaboration between the disgraced Tom Moyane and the Sunday Times ‘Rogue Unit’ reporters.
Hundreds of careers disrupted.
To the immense detriment of the fiscus and the country as a whole.
Falsely defamed
One of the falsely defamed victims of this sordid state capture smear campaign is Ivan Pillay whose story is told by his wife, journalist Eveleyn Groenink, in her book The Unlikely Mr Rogue: A Life with Ivan Pillay.
Another is Johann van Loggerenberg.
As reported internationally, whistle blower Athol Williams fled the country fearing for his life.
Will there ever be retribution?
Can there ever be recompense?
It is a question which I am sure that Pete Richer and Ivan Pillay and Johann van Loggerenberg and Adrian Lackay and all the other victims of the Sunday Times ‘brothel’ reporting would like to see answered.
Van Loggerenberg has justifiably called for those implicated in the subversive sabotage of the revenue service to be prosecuted and former president Thabo Mbeki agrees, describing it as ‘counter-revolutionary’ and deserving of ‘harsh consequences’.
Van Loggerenberg continues to be a victim of the persecution begun by the reporters who, along with Bain and Moyane, were among the initial architects of the state capture project.
One of them, Stephan Hofstatter has publicly apologised and, as detailed in Anton Harber’s book, subsequently had a series of meetings with Van Loggerenberg. It is clear that he did not know about the collusion between Moyane and his colleagues.
There has been no hint of contrition from Rampedi and wa Afrika, now safely ensconced in the supportive environment at Sekunjalo Independent Media.
Facilitating the investigation by the Hawks and the NPA into the role of the ‘Rogue Unit’ reporters in the decimation of SARS will be the fact – reported by The Citizen in October 2019 and never denied – that Rampedi was being investigated by the Inspector General of Intelligence, Setlhomamaru Dintwe, for his role in state capture. With
Opposition party members need to question in parliament as a matter of urgency, what progress has been made in this investigation and whether the role of the media in damaging SARS will be investigated as a priority – which it should be, given the call by President Cyril Ramaphosa on 5 January.
Ed Herbst began his journalism career as a photographer in 1968 before transitioning to reporting and later becoming a camera reporter for the SABC. He took early retirement in 2005 due to SABC corruption and censorship, later working as a media consultant before retiring fully; he now writes on media and politics and is working on a book about media capture after 1994.