Daily Maverick New.png

 

 

SARS 'rogue unit' controversy:

 

New revelations bring everything into question

 

 

Marianne Thamm, Daily Maverick, Johannesburg, 3 December 2015

 

The current SARS "rogue" unit saga, which threatens to destabilise the
country's revenue service, has all the hallmarks of a "black propaganda"
campaign. The aim is to plant stories, confuse and obfuscate truth, and
ultimately create confusion in the public realm to achieve a desired result;
it worked successfully for the Bush Administration during the build-up to
the Iraq war. The latest revelations suggest this could be a crisis and a
big systemic threat.

 

One of the most frequently used phrases in the reporting of the fallout of
the discovery of an alleged SARS "rogue" unit set up to spy on President
Jacob Zuma and other powerful politicians, businessmen, tax evaders and
organised criminals, is the "dual narrative" or "alternative narrative" that
is being employed by the media in order to make sense of it all.

 

In so doing, the media itself, particularly The Sunday Times who broke the
story of the unit, has been brought into question. Who can we trust? Who's
telling the truth? What is going on at the country's tax collection agency
and who stands to benefit from the confusion and subterfuge? And, most
importantly, was the newspaper used in an elaborate intelligence loop
planned and executed using the media to sideline former deputy SARS
commissioner, Ivan Pillay and others? And if so, why?

 

As the saga drags out and on, it will be plagued by more questions than
answers (for now) - a situation that is seriously damaging the credibility
of one of the country's most important institutions, its tax collection
agency. This is a national crisis that might well require Minister of
Finance Nhlanhla Nene to call for an entirely new and truly independent
judicial commission of inquiry in order to restore faith in SARS and to get
to the root of the rot.

 

Kroon compromised

 

In particular, the Kroon Advisory Committee, set up by Minister Nene and
headed by retired Judge Franklyn Kroon to look into allegations of fraud and
irregularity at SARS, has been compromised by recent allegations that one of
its members, Advocate Rudolf Mastenbroek, was the source for the Sunday
Times investigation.

 

In an affidavit by investigative journalist Pearlie Joubert, who had worked
for two years for the Sunday Times, and which emerged during a Press
Ombudsman hearing brought this week by former deputy commissioner Ivan
Pillay and group executive Johan van Loggerenberg against the newspaper, it
is claimed that Pillay was axed from his position based on these untested
Sunday Times reports.

 

The Kroon Commission, in turn, appears to have done nothing more than read
and accept preliminary recommendations of the Sikhakane Report - led by
advocate Muzi Sikhakane - and did not call or cross-examine witnesses or
test any of the evidence or allegations.

 

The web of intrigue and apparent back-stabbing begins at SARS and ripples
outwards, implicating some of the most powerful politicians and individuals
in the country. This is a story of national importance - one of the most
significant - perhaps even more destructive than the Nkandla Scandal. It
threatens the political stability of the country which is why it has become
so difficult to navigate through the fog.

 

Joubert's affidavit

 

The heat was turned up a notch when Joubert's affidavit was read out at the
Press Ombud hearing on Tuesday. Joubert had given the sworn statement in
support of SARS in October 2015 for a notice of motion brought by alleged
tax offender and suspected drug smuggler, Martin Wingate-Pearce. Pearce, a
businessman and shareholder in the tobacco company Carnilinx, is seeking a
refund claiming information on his tax affairs were gained illegally by the
unit.

 

In the affidavit Joubert alleges that The Sunday Times had been "unethical
and immoral" in its reporting on the SARS covert investigation unit and that
the stories had been untrue and part of "an orchestrated effort by people to
advance untested allegations in the public arena."

 

The editor at the time, Phylicia Oppelt, has in the meantime responded in a
statement to Joubert's claims saying that an internal investigation was
launched when the affidavit was first brought to the attention of Times
Media, owners of The Sunday Times.

 

"An independent, external party conducted a comprehensive examination of
Joubert's accusations. None, however malicious and obviously driven by a
personal agenda, was found to have substance - specifically the claim that
my former husband held sway in the reporting on SARS," said Oppelt.

 

However, Joubert felt so strongly about the issue, she says, that she was
prepared to break a golden rule of journalism disclosing her initial source
as [Rudolf] Mastenbroek, Oppelt's former husband and an ex-SARS official.

 

Mastenbroek, Rudolf.png

 

Prior to joining the bar  <http://www.thulamela.com/team/mastenbroek/>
Mastenbroek had worked for the ANC's head office, had helped establish the
Asset Forfeiture Unit in the NPA and was a legal advisor to the first
National Director of Public Prosecutions Bulelani Ngcuka. He was also part
of senior management of the Directorate of Special Operations (the now
disbanded Scorpions) and headed the Criminal Investigations unit in SARS.
The Daily Maverick has learned from a reliable source that he then joined,
for a short period, in 2013, a law firm Mashiane Moodley and Monama.
(Mastenbroek was admitted as an advocate in 2013.)

 

Mastenbroek and Joubert grew up together and had been friends for over
quarter of a century.

 

Leaked report

 

Sunday Times Managing Director, Andrew Gill, has also hit back at Joubert,
charging that her claims were "vindictive" and "fanciful" and denied that
Mastenbroek had been the source of the paper's stories. Gill added that the
paper's claims had been backed up by "a number of independent
investigations, most recently a KPMG report."

 

KMPG is the country's biggest auditing firm and the report that Gill refers
to in his statement refuting Joubert's claims is not yet a public document.
It was submitted to current commissioner Tom Moyane a few weeks ago, which
begs the question how Gill could possibly know its contents. It would be
safe to assume then that the report, or at least correspondence relating to
it, has been leaked to The Sunday Times.

 

Moyane initiated the KMPG report in the light of the preliminary Sikhakane
Report as well as the Kroon's Advisory Committee which found that the
establishment of the covert unit was illegal.

 

The answer as to how Gill might have had insight into the unreleased report
might be found in a leaked memorandum to KPMG by the law firm Mashiane
Moodley and Monama, dated 21 August 2015 and signed off by attorney David
Maphakela.

 

The memorandum is addressed to Johan van der Walt, a forensic auditor with
KPMG (and who recently left SARS where he was employed) and serves "to
provide KPMG with comments in respect of the South African Revenue Service
report on allegations of irregularities and misconduct".

 

Echo chamber

 

The memorandum by Mashiane Moodley and Monama also makes "findings and
recommendations" to KPMG for inclusion in their final report creating, at
best, a troubling and clearly problematic SARS echo chamber.

 

Daily Maverick could not confirm whether KPMG had solicited this opinion
from Mashiane Moodley and Monama - acting for SARS - or whether the document
itself had originated from its offices.

 

Maphakela told the Daily Maverick yesterday he could not "confirm or deny"
the veracity of the memorandum or that it emanated from the offices of his
law firm.

 

"It is a SARS document and I am not authorised to speak to the media," he
told the Daily Maverick.

 

Van der Walt also refused to confirm or deny to the existence of the
memorandum, quoting his obligation to secrecy which prohibited him from
speaking.

 

Grossly irregular

 

That Mashiane Moodley and Monama may have made these findings and
recommendations and supplied these to KPMG for inclusion in the final report
appears to be grossly irregular, as the entire point of appointing an
independent auditing firm is for it to conduct an independent investigation
and to made independent findings. (Also problematic is the fact that
Mastenbrook was previously associated with the firm.) It is unknown at this
stage whether any of these recommendations have made it into the final KPMG
report.

 

Mashiane Moodley and Monama suggests that KPMG find that the unit, on the
instruction of Pillay "unlawfully monitored, intercepted communication and
recorded and transcribed recordings at NPA offices. The SARS intelligence
gathering exercise at the NPA was known as 'project Sundays' and was aimed
at gathering intelligence in the criminal investigation into Jackie Selebi.
All reports, transcriptions and recordings were handed to Mr Pillay for his
consideration."

 

It further "found" that SARS "unlawfully engaged in the procurement of
surveillance equipment with the necessary interception capacity" including
Pinhole lens cameras, signal jammers, GSM modules, SIGNET mobile GSM
detectors, and "pulse" which was able to turn remote desktop and laptops
into audio and camera surveillance devices.

 

Under a heading "Governance" the law firm suggests "Mr Pillay and Mr van
Loggerenberg engaged in irregular and potentially unlawful conduct when they
attended a meeting arranged by the late Jackie Selebi and Glen Agliotti on
behalf of a taxpayer (Gavin Varejes) for purposes of intervening in a
dispute between two taxpayers who were subject of an ongoing investigation
by SARS and the NPA. Mr Pillay and Van Loggerenberg disregarded or
interfered with and ongoing investigation by a designated SARS official."

 

Further "findings", among others, are that former SARS commissioner and
later Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan, be "made to account" for the
extension of Pillay's contract in 2011, three years before it expired and
also that Pillay be made to repay R106,446,420 spent on the creation of the
so-called rogue unit.

 

No opportunity to defend

 

Gordhan and Pillay have both reportedly said that they were unaware of the
contents of the KPMG report and had never been asked to make representations
during the investigation.

 

In a statement to City Press in October Pillay said that he was not the only
person denied an opportunity to defend the charges and that none of the
former SARS officials named in the report had been called to give evidence.

 

"The alleged findings you refer to can therefore have no standing or merit
in law," said Pillay.

 

This is certainly not the end of the matter. While Phylia Oppelt is no
longer editor of The Sunday Times and Joubert says she now finds herself in
a journalistic wilderness, the repercussions from this scandal are bound to
play out in the media in the coming weeks and indeed involve the media
itself as a potential key player.

 

However, the taxpaying public, have been ill-served by a series of
investigations that have now been called into question and have been
compromised - not only by the current drama plaguing the Sunday Times but
also by Gordhan and Pillay, who strongly question the legality of these
probes.

 

The trust deficit at present could not be greater. Who do we believe? And
can we have any faith that those tasked with collecting and distributing the
country's revenue will not be drawn into a winner-takes-all political
battle? And finally, who or what is in the eye of the storm? DM

 

From:
<http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2015-12-03-sars-rogue-unit-controver
sy-new-revelations-bring-everything-into-question/#.VmBrG7h9600>
http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2015-12-03-sars-rogue-unit-controvers
y-new-revelations-bring-everything-into-question/#.VmBrG7h9600

 

See also:
<http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/opinionista/2015-12-03-the-sars-wars/#.VmBrH
rh9600>
http://www.dailymaverick.co.za/opinionista/2015-12-03-the-sars-wars/#.VmBrHr
h9600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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