State Capture Commission Report Part VI Vol III
State Capture Commission Report Part VI Vol III
State Capture Commission Report Part VI Vol III
of
of
Report: Part VI
and
INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................. 1
Transnet Contracts in which Offshore Kickbacks were paid to the Gupta Enterprise
.......................................................................................................................................... 8
Regiments Contracts with Organs of State in respect of which Kickbacks were paid
to the Gupta Enterprise ................................................................................................ 10
The Systems Applications Products (SAP) Contracts with Transnet and Eskom .... 18
Amounts Paid by State Departments and SOEs to Companies under the Direct
Control of the Gupta Enterprise ................................................................................... 29
Introduction
1. From at least 2011 onwards, government departments and SOE’s were targeted for
capture by the Gupta Enterprise. This led to the awarding of a vast array of contracts
and the payment of billions of rand to entities paying kickbacks to, or controlled by, the
Gupta Enterprise. This chapter details the flow of funds from SOE’s or government
2. In the earliest phase of State Capture, the Gupta Enterprise operated according to a
crude modus operandi, namely, to work with officials to generate projects from which
the Gupta Enterprise would directly steal funds that were directed to the Gupta’s
offshore network. This model was used most notably in the provincial governments of
3.1. On 31 October 2011, the Free State Department of Agriculture and Rural
3.2. The contract was irregularly awarded without any competitive bidding process
and appears to have been designed primarily as a device to funnel Free State
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................ 45
THE FOURTH MONEY LAUNDERING NETWORK: JULY 2015 TO JULY 2017 .............. 61
PAYMENTS TO THE GUPTA ENTITY, GRIFFIN LINE VIA THE EXTENDED LOCAL
LAUNDRY NETWORK AND ONSHORE OFFSHORE BRIDGES ...................................... 69
THE DISSIPATION OF STATE CAPTURE-DERIVED FUNDS
NETWORKS
Introduction
83. The Gupta enterprise used a range of different money laundering networks to dissipate
the funds it generated from State Capture. These money laundering networks became
84. To begin with, the Gupta enterprise externalised its State Capture profits with extremely
84.1. domestic Gupta companies that received irregular contracts with the South
African State would transfer the benefits of those contracts directly into Gupta
companies in the UAE whereafter they would circulate through offshore Gupta
Africa;65
84.2. kickbacks extracted from third party foreign contractors with Transnet would be
paid directly into the accounts of Gupta companies in the UAE66 or to JJ Trading
FZE and Century General Trading FZE. The latter were companies within the
65 See for example the laundering of the payments made by the Free State Government to the Estina Dairy. These
are traced in detail in Mr Holden’s Estina Dairy Report (Annexure VV5.1) at pp VV5-PEH-061 to 108
66 An obvious example would be the Liebherr payments to Accurate Investments in respect of the Transnet cranes
contract awarded to Liebherr. These payments are analysed by Mr Holden in his Transnet report (Annexure
VV5.2) at pp VV5-PEH-1135 to 1151.
THE ACQUISITION OF THE OPTIMUM COAL MINE
152. The acquisition of Optimum Coal Holdings Ltd (“OCH”) by Tegeta Exploration and
Resources (Pty) Ltd (“Tegeta”) is part of what triggered the establishment of this
Commission. That acquisition was the central focus of the Public Protector’s
153. The investigations of the Commission have borne out the findings of the Public
Protector in relation to the acquisition of OCH and have shown that this acquisition was
a State Capture project pursued through unlawful means and funded almost entirely by
proceeds of crime.
154. The ownership structure of Tegeta at the time of the acquisition was follows:
154.1. 29.05% was owned by the Gupta family company Oakbay Investments (Pty)
Ltd,
a 15% interest,
154.2.4. the Gupta family UAE based company, Fidelity Enterprise Limited held a
Report: Part VI
Vol. 3: Various Individuals and Topics
171. Lord Peter Hain is a member of the House of Lords, United Kingdom. He testified before
the Commission on 18 November 2019. He did so voluntarily. His evidence was based
172. Lord Hain grew up in South Africa and in 1966, at the age of 16, went into exile in the
United Kingdom. Lord Hain’s involvement in the anti-apartheid struggle is well known
publicly.
173. Lord Hain observed at the outset of his evidence that, as he understood state capture,
it was facilitated “by the massive complicity of international financial and other
174. Lord Hain’s evidence was divided into two parts. First, a review of the involvement of
particular actors in the state capture project, namely, international actors, corporates,
175. Lord Hain observed that money laundering was an international criminal activity of vast
South Africa are unable to curb the free flow of money laundering and international
(financial) crime. This phenomenon, observed Lord Hain, results in significant domestic
impoverishment.
ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION OF THE EVIDENCE OF
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Approach to the analysis and evaluation of the evidence of Ms Mentor ................ 110
Ms Mentor’s disclosures of the offer made to her by Mr Ajay Gupta ...................... 117
Ms Mentor’s flights to and from Johannesburg on the day of her alleged meetings
with Mr Ajay Gupta and President Zuma ................................................................... 124
Whether Ms Mentor was served mutton curry in the Saxonwold compound ......... 125
INTRODUCTION
214. The purpose of this part of the Report is to analyse the evidence of Ms Mabel Patronella
(“Vytjie") Mentor, which was presented to the Commission. The terms of reference of
215. Ms Mentor joined the ANC in the 1980, she was also associated with the United
Democratic Front, a formation of women within the ANC and the UDF called SA
Federation of Transvaal Women, the SA Youth Congress and the National Education
Coordinating Committee. These latter organisations were formed at a time when the
ANC was still banned. In addition, she was a member of the National Union of SA
Students.
216. In about 1999, after the second democratic local government elections, Ms Mentor was
appointed a councillor in the district municipality serving the Kimberley region and
became the deputy secretary of the ANC in that region. In 2000 she was appointed to
for the ANC in the National Assembly. In 2004, she was elected as the chair of the
Portfolio Committee on Public Enterprises. In 2004 she was appointed as an ANC whip
for discipline and, soon after that, the national chair of the ANC caucus in Parliament,
where she served until 2008, when, shortly after President Zuma became the ANC
president, she was removed from that position and left Parliament.
217. While she held office as an MP, Ms Mentor served on several committees, including
portfolio committees for public enterprises, education, public service and administration,
108
Zuma and Mr B Ngcuka, the protection of state information, and the caucus dealing with
218. In about November 2010, Ms Mentor ceased to be the chair of the portfolio committee
on public enterprises. She believes that she was removed because she had offended
219. In the latter part of 2014, Ms Mentor suffered what she described as gruesome injuries,
220. Ms Mentor made two statements to the Commission, i.e. her first statement signed on
September 2021, as well as a statement to the Public Protector signed on 9 May 2016
and two supplementary statements to the Public Protector, signed on 28 June 2016 and
14 December 2016. She had an interview with the Public Protector on 21 July 2016,
which was transcribed and placed before the Commission. In addition, Ms Mentor was
221. On 26 May 2016, Ms Mentor laid charges against President Zuma, certain members of
Cabinet and certain board members of SOEs with the SAPS. For this purpose, she
removed President Zuma’s name from the statement and made certain changes to the
manuscript. She was dissatisfied at the progress of the investigation into her charges
and laid charges of obstructing justice against certain persons she believed were tasked
222. Ms Mentor gave oral testimony to the Commission on 27-29 August 2018 and 11-12
February 2019.
223. It is therefore fair to say that from 2016 Ms Mentor made strenuous efforts to make her
224. In her first statement to the Commission, Ms Mentor claimed that in about October 2010,
about a week before a Cabinet reshuffle took place, Mr Ajay Gupta made an offer to Ms
Mentor that she should accept the position of Minister of Public Enterprises, provided
she agreed to use that position to cancel the flight which SA Airways conducted
between South Africa and India. She went on in the same statement to set out how she
225. Ms Mentor gave a great deal of detail in which she described the context in which the
alleged offer was made. Mr Ajay Gupta denied the allegation in a series of affidavits but
did not himself give oral testimony to the Commission. As is well known, the entire
Gupta family, including Mr Ajay Gupta, left South Africa and have one and all refused
to give evidence before the Commission, on spurious grounds. President Zuma himself,
Commission.
110
226. Ms Mentor’s allegations, featured prominently in the SOCR.132 The Public Protector
Mentor’s allegations.133
227. Item 1.1 to the Schedule establishing the Commission explicitly requires the
concerning the veracity of allegations that Ms Mentor was offered a Cabinet position by
228. In addition, ToRs 1.2 and 1.3 require the Commission to inquire into, make findings,
report on and make recommendations concerning whether President Zuma had any
role in the alleged offers of Cabinet positions to Ms Mentor by the Gupta family and
whether the appointment of any member of the National Executive, functionary and/or
office bearer was disclosed to the Gupta family before such appointments were formally
229. It is trite that the evidence of a witness should not be accepted simply because it is
THE EVIDENCE
230. I begin by recounting the evidence relating to the alleged offer made to her of the
position of Minister of Public Enterprises as set out in her first statement to the
Commission.
231. In about August 2010, Ms Mentor travelled to the Peoples Republic of China to explore
solutions to the issue of repeated power outages, which was at that stage already a
severe problem for Eskom and the government. Ms Mentor undertook the trip alone, as
the chairperson of the portfolio committee for public enterprises. This was a preliminary
visit. The entire committee had applied for permission to travel to China for this purpose,
and the thinking was that the full committee would travel to China on a later date. Ms
Mentor had already been to China for the same purpose. Ms Mentor’s visit was part of
232. Ms Mentor was advised by Transnet, which was paying for her trip, to obtain
accreditation through the Department of Trade and Industry. She was directed to a DDG
associate.
233. Ms Mentor travelled to Dubai on a first class ticket, via Dubai. She said that she was
told that only first class tickets were available. During the flight, she was introduced to
the son of President Zuma, Mr Duduzane Zuma, who was in the company of a man to
whom Mr Duduzane Zuma introduced to her as his partner. She later learnt that this
man was Mr Rajesh Gupta, who mentioned to MS Mentor that his brother was a
235. On arrival in China, Ms Mentor undertook the process of obtaining accreditation, so that
she could attend the business meetings associated with the state visit and attend the
state banquet scheduled for later that evening. She observed three men, whom she
described as Indian men, with two way radios who appeared to be very busy arranging
the logistics for the state visit. She later learnt that these three men were the Gupta
236. After the ceremonial part of the proceedings, the South Africans present gathered in a
large hall. Amongst them were some twelve SA Ministers. Ms Mentor found the
Ministers cold towards her, which she found puzzling and hurtful.
237. After the proceedings, Ms Mentor went to her hotel room. There she received a call
from the hotel reception to say that two Indian men, who claimed to be South Africans
and part of the state visit were asking for her room number. She asked the receptionist
to ask the men some questions. One of the men took the phone and introduced himself
to her by the name of Gupta. She assumed that this man was one of the three Indian
238. The man told Ms Mentor that President Zuma had sent him to invite Ms Mentor to meet
President Zuma at the Chinese presidential guesthouse. He offered to take her to the
guesthouse and thereafter to the banquet. Ms Mentor declined to go with the man. She
asked how she could possibly agree to be driven by complete strangers at night in a
foreign country. The man assured her he took care of all President Zuma’s state visits
and that he led the President’s advance team. This suggested to Ms Mentor that the
man was one of the Gupta brothers because Rajesh Gupta had told her on the flight to
China that his brother was a member of President Zuma’s advance team.
113
239. The man said he would contact President Zuma and get back to her. He called again
to say that President Zuma would not leave for the banquet until he had spoken to her.
Ms Mentor again declined and the man’s tone became threatening. She ultimately left
the phone off the hook. She remained in her hotel and neither met President Zuma nor
240. On the following day, Ms Mentor had a lengthy meeting at her hotel and obtained firm
proposals which she could take back to Eskom and her committee. She decided to bring
241. In about October 2010, Ms Mentor received a call from Ms Kaunda, an assistant to
President Zuma. Ms Mentor had been trying for some time to meet with Mr Zuma
described by the witness as the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor. This was a project of
Mentor that Mr Atul Gupta would contact her to arrange the meeting for which President
Zuma was available on the following day, and that if Mr Gupta did not contact Ms
Kaunda.
242. Later that evening, Ms Mentor and Mr Atul Gupta spoke and arrangements for the
meeting were made. Ms Mentor flew to Johannesburg and was met by Atul and Rajesh
Gupta. Ms Mentor was still on crutches from her injuries and needed assistance to get
around. She was taken first to the offices of Sahara Computers, a Gupta computer
business, where she met Mr Ajay Gupta. Mr Ajay Gupta struck up a conversation with
Ms Mentor and then told her that President Zuma had been delayed because there had
243. During the conversation, Ms Mentor was struck by the ring which Mr Ajay Gupta was
wearing, a gold ring with a ruby stone which he wore on his index finger. She asked him
about the ring. Mr Ajay Gupta volunteered the information that the ring had belonged to
his late father and that in the Hindu culture that ring was now required to be worn by Mr
Ajay Gupta, who had by reason of his father’s death risen to the status of patriarch
244. During the discussion between Mr Ajay Gupta and Ms Mentor, Mr Gupta made
unsolicited offers to Ms Mentor of the use of the Guptas’ box at Newlands cricket ground
and a new bat for her son who, Ms Mentor had disclosed, played cricket for a Western
245. While waiting at the offices of Sahara, Ms Mentor called her friend Ms Daphne Nkosi
246. Ms Mentor was then taken by Atul and Rajesh Gupta to the Gupta compound in
Saxonwold. This was the first time she had been there. She gave a description of the
layout of the compound and the main house, whose interior impressed her as being
“very beautiful”. She described the cloakroom fittings, which had some gold plating, in
admiring terms. She had thought the meeting with President Zuma would be at the
Union Buildings. While she was waiting, she was offered lunch and chose a mutton
curry.136 She also made another call to Ms Nkosi, who assured Ms Mentor that she could
134 Ms Mentor’s statement to the Commission signed on 25 July 2018 para 76. This was one of a series of
descriptions given by Ms Mentor to demonstrate, no doubt, that she had actual personal knowledge of the
allegations she made and was not just making them up.
135 Ms Mentor’s statement to the Commission signed on 25 July 2018 para 70
136 Ms Mentor’s statement to the Commission signed on 25 July 2018 para 83
137 Ms Mentor’s statement to the Commission signed on 25 July 2018 para 84
115
247. Some hours later, Mr Ajay Gupta came into the room in which Ms Mentor was sitting.
He asked her about the uranium in the Northern Cape, the province from which Ms
Mentor came. Ajay Gupta said he knew Ms Mentor came from the Northern Cape. Mr
Ajay Gupta said uranium was needed for nuclear energy and that the Guptas would
soon be the main supplier of uranium for the government’s nuclear program.
248. Mr Ajay Gupta further referred to a legal problem which Denel had in India and said that
he could solve that problem as the Guptas were close to the Indian government. This
matter was top secret. Ms Mentor was surprised that Mr Ajay Gupta knew about it.
249. Mr Ajay Gupta said that he knew that Ms Mentor was meeting President Zuma to
discuss the Pebble Bed Modular Reactor. He said that the project ought to be closed
250. Mr Ajay Gupta opined that the turnaround strategy of SA Airways was not yielding
results. He observed that the SAA route to India was not profitable. Ms Mentor asked
him what would happen to the passengers and goods transported over that route. My
Ajay Gupta told Ms Mentor not to worry as they were in partnership with an airline which
251. Mr Ajay Gupta thereupon, very casually, offered Ms Mentor the position of the next
Minister of Public Enterprises if she would agree to facilitate the closure of SSA’s India
flight when she became Minister. He said there would be a Cabinet reshuffle in the next
week or so.
252. Ms Mentor was shocked and told Mr Ajay Gupta that the SAA statistics showed that the
India route was doing very well. She asked how he could be in a position to offer her a
position as a Minister. After a silence, Mr Ajay Gupta said “We usually do”. She asked
253. Ms Mentor became agitated and angry and raised her voice. At that moment, President
Zuma entered the room. Ms Mentor testified that she entered the room from one
direction and Ajay Gupta and President Zuma from another. Ms Mentor stood to greet
President Zuma. Mr Ajay Gupta remained seated. He and President Zuma did not greet
each other. She told President Zuma what Ajay Gupta had just said.
254. President Zuma did not seem concerned or surprised when she told him that Ajay Gupta
had just offered her a ministerial position. He kept telling Ms Mentor to calm down. Ms
Mentor decided it would be best if she left. She called Ms Nkosi to say that she was
going back to Cape Town and would later tell her what had happened.
255. President Zuma carried Ms Mentor’s bag for her to the vehicle in which she was to be
taken to the airport and helped her into the vehicle. Ms Mentor then flew back to Cape
Town.
256. As President Zuma and Ms Mentor were leaving the house, Mr Ajay Gupta asked
President Zuma if he wanted anything to eat. President Zuma responded that he would
eat at the house of his son Duduzane, who was always complaining that President
Zuma did not take meals with them. Ms Mentor looked at President Zuma with surprise
and President Zuma explained that Duduzane lived next door to the Guptas.
257. A week or so later, President Zuma reshuffled his Cabinet and replaced Ms Barbara
Hogan as Minister of Public Enterprises with Mr Gigaba. She understood that after the
reshuffle, SAA abandoned its India route, which was taken over by a Gupta-associated
airline.
117
258. Ms Mentor alleged in her first statement to the Commission that she made the following
258.1. Shortly after the encounter with Mr Ajay Gupta and President Zuma at the
258.2. In her interview with the PP, Ms Mentor said that she recounted the incident to
trusted. She did not give this person’s name and did not mention this disclosure
unspecified date.
But they hap [sic] previously asked me to become Minister of Public Enterprises
when Barbara Hogan got the chop, provided that I would drop the SAA flight-route
to India and given to them. I refused and so was never made a Minister. The
President was in another room when they offered me this in Saxonwold.
259. Ms Mentor laid criminal charges against President Zuma and others in a statement
which was typewritten and bore the typed date 9 May 2016. In this statement she
recounted the offer to her made by Mr Ajay Gupta at the Saxonwold compound.
260. On 21 July 2016, Ms Mentor recounted the offer made to her by Mr Ajay Gupta during
an interview with the then Public Protector. During the interview, Ms Mentor described
a large supporting pillar in the room in which she sat waiting in the main house in the
Saxonwold compound, as she thought, for President Zuma to arrive for their meeting.139
261. In this section, I examine other sources of information and relate such information to
262. Ms Mentor gave oral testimony to the Commission on days 4, 5, 6, 47 and 48, i.e. 27,
263. Relative to her trip to China, Ms Mentor was referred to a book she had written by her
which was published in 2017. On p137 of that book, she said that the black man
introduced to her on the flight to China by Mr Duduzane Zuma was Mr Brian Hlongwane,
which was the name of a former MEC for Health in Gauteng. She explained that the
book misstated the fact and that the black man to whom she was introduced was indeed
Mr Fana Hlongwane. She ascribed the mistake to the similarity of the two surnames.140
264. Ms Mentor referred to the coldness she experienced towards her from other South
Africans in the briefing session before the state visit as such commenced. She did not
baggage carousel in Hong Kong on her way home from China, she came to notice a
woman whom she identified in her mind as a South African because she was struck by
that woman’s luggage, which she described as expensive and beautiful and frankly
266. On a similar note, Ms Mentor described the coffee table and sofa in an ante-room in the
Sahara building where she was asked to wait as being “fairly worn out, not fancy at all”
and the office of Mr Ajay Gupta in that building as being “Not so big” with a desk that
267. Ms Mentor testified that the gold in the ring on Mr Ajay Gupta’s index finger did not look
like 9 carat gold but like 18 or 24 carat because it was “very bright”.144
268. Ms Mentor deduced from the fact Mr Ajay Gupta referred to certain issues which Ms
Mentor was going to discuss with President Zuma at their proposed meeting that Mr
269. Ms Mentor believed the steps leading up to the main house in the Saxonwold compound
as being made of marble, although she believed they could have been made of
granite.146
270. Ms Mentor described the room in which she waited for her proposed meeting as a large
lounge/reception area, which was too sparsely furnished because it had only two
couches and a coffee table. The room contained a giant pillar, which lacked beauty
because it was not properly covered. Behind it there was a “very gigantic” window,
which she appreciated because it was massive and brought in a lot of light. She also
observed artwork on the walls, which she looked at and wondered whether it was an
271. Ms Mentor described how the chef who came to take her lunch order almost kneeled
before her to take her order and how she asked him to rise because “a person should
272. In relation to the cloakroom used by Ms Mentor, she said that she remembered the gold
detail and wondered whether it was real gold or gold gilded. She found the mirror
beautiful and thought it might be French because all the mirrors she loved were French.
She observed “expensive hand lotions and stuff” there.149 The cloakroom was shown to
Ms Mentor by Mr Atul Gupta, who asked her if he could show her the other cloakrooms,
273. In her testimony, Ms Mentor said that Mr Ajay Gupta told her that the airline in which he
was in partnership was called Jet Airways and that after Mr Gigaba became Minister of
Public Enterprises, SAA’s flight to India was indeed cancelled and taken over by Jet
Airlines.150
274. Ms Mentor testified that during her exchange with President Zuma after Ajay Gupta had
offered her the ministerial post, she apologised to President Zuma for refusing to go to
see him in China. President Zuma responded that it was okay, she must not worry.151
275. Ms Mentor also testified that as they were leaving the house for the vehicle to take her
to the airport, President Zuma said to Ms Mentor that if he had known she was on
crutches, he would not have asked her to come to meet him. She understood that they
would meet again because President Zuma said to her in isiZulu, take care of yourself,
we will meet again.152Ms Mentor described in her testimony how President Zuma might
have been listening to the exchange between her and Mr Ajay Gupta and how he did
not appear to be surprised or angered or annoyed when she told him that Ajay Gupta
had offered her the ministerial post.153 Nor did he ask Mr Ajay Gupta if what Ms Mentor
EVIDENCE
276. A number of persons filed affidavits with the Commission or otherwise responded,
Ms L Kaunda
277. Ms Kaunda was a DDG in the Presidency at the relevant time. Ms Kaunda filed an
There is one important difference between the two versions. Ms Mentor said that it was
Ms Kaunda who called her to set up the meeting with President Zuma after she returned
from China. Ms Kaunda filed an affidavit denying that she had called Ms Mentor and
tendering the records of her office to substantiate her denial and seeking leave to cross-
examine Ms Mentor.155
intervene in litigation between the President of the Republic and the Public Protector,156
Ms Mentor said that she did not know the name of the person who called her to arrange
the meeting.
279. Ms Mentor sought to explain away the contradiction by claiming that there was a
miscommunication between herself and her lawyers who drafted the affidavit. I do not
280. Ms Kaunda was granted leave to cross-examine Ms Mentor.157 Pursuant to such leave
281. There are other differences in the versions of the two persons but in my view none of
the other material which was raised by Ms Kaunda bore significantly upon the testimony
of Ms Mentor. It is therefore unnecessary to delve into the detail of the two versions in
that respect.
282. However, the dispute about whether Ms Kaunda called Ms Mentor to arrange the
meeting is of a different calibre. Despite being confronted with the differences in her
versions from time to time on the point and the records produced by Ms Kaunda, Ms
Mentor refused to acknowledge that she might have been mistaken on the issue.
283. Ms Mentor’s adamant refusal to concede that she might have been mistaken on the
point has a deeper significance. It shows either that she is very reluctant to accept that
she might be mistaken in her recollection or that her testimony as a whole is unworthy
of belief. After all, as was put to Ms Mentor, the trigger event which caused Ms Mentor,
on her version, to travel to Johannesburg to see President Zuma was the call from the
my view, Ms Kaunda made no such call. I therefore consider very carefully whether Ms
President Zuma
284. In response to Ms Mentor’s Facebook post on 14 March 2016, that she had been offered
a ministerial post if she facilitated the abandonment by SAA of its flight to India, the
Presidency issued a statement on 15 March 2016 in which the President stated that he
had no recollection of Ms Mentor and was therefore unable to comment on any alleged
incident in her career.159 That was the only response of President Zuma to Ms Mentor’s
testimony.
285. Ms Mentor responded to the presidential assertion by explaining that President Zuma
sat next to and spoke to Ms Mentor in the ANC caucus each Thursday when Parliament
was in session and President Zuma was in the country for more than four years. This,
she said happened more than 20 times. She sat with him in the ANC’s political
committee each month. President Zuma was deployed by the ANC executive to tell Ms
286. The assertion in the statement of the Presidency that President Zuma had no
159 Transcript: Mentor day 5 p99; Exhibit MPM5 to statement of Ms Mentor to the Commission.
160 Transcript: Mentor day 5 pp103 and 105
124
Zuma could have forgotten about the incident at the Saxonwold compound to which Ms
287. It is telling that President Zuma sought refuge in alleged loss of “recollection” and found
himself unable to deny that he and Ms Mentor were together that day at the Saxonwold
288. On day 47, 11 February 2019, Ms Mentor said that she retracted her allegations against
her to this person on the flight from Dubai to China as “my chairman”. Neither the
allegation nor the retraction appear to take the issue for consideration by me further,
289. On day 47, 11 February 2019, after documents were presented to Ms Mentor, she
accepted that she had not travelled back to South Africa from China via Hong Kong.162
Ms Mentor’s flights to and from Johannesburg on the day of her alleged meetings with
290. Ms Mentor was presented with records of SAA which purported to cast doubt on the
allegation that she travelled to Johannesburg on the day in question and returned to
291. Ms Mentor questioned the accuracy of these records and adhered to her version.
292. Reference was made on day 47 to an inspection in loco at the Gupta compound in
and how the property looked on the date of the inspection. It is clear that Ms Mentor
was inaccurate in her recollection of certain details. It should be born in mind that the
issue is whether a corrupt offer of a cabinet position was made to Ms Mentor by Mr Ajay
Gupta and, if such an offer was made, what inferences should be drawn from President
293. Mr Ajay Gupta disputed through an affidavit that Hindu culture required him to wear a
ruby ring or any ring on his index finger. Ms Mentor produced a photograph from media
294. Ms Mentor adhered to her version that Mr Gupta told her he wore the ring as required
by Hindu culture. The fact that Mr Gupta disputed that he wore the ring for that reason
does not bear upon Ms Mentor’s credibility: she merely repeated what she said Mr
295. Mr Ajay Gupta denied that Ms Mentor was offered mutton curry although he admitted
that the family employed a chef. He said that they would not have allowed any form of
meat, let alone chopped up sheep, to enter their home. Ms Mentor adhered to her
version.165
296. The undated statement of Mr Pratap Kumar Penulama was introduced into evidence
comparative religions at the school of religion, philosophy and classics at the University
of KZN. Mr Penulama was asked by Ms Mentor’s attorneys to give his views on the
297. Mr Penulama expressed the view that many adherents to the Hindu faith do not regard
the consumption of mutton as unacceptable and that it was not uncommon for Hindu
families who themselves are vegetarian to offer non-vegetarian foods such as cooked
298. Mr Penulama said that the practice of passing down an item of heirloom nature had
nothing to do with Hindu custom as such but that it was quite common in Indian society
for such an item to be handed down to the eldest son and that in wealthy families, the
299. Records were produced showing that Mr Siyabonga Cwele was no longer a member of
the Portfolio Committee on Intelligence when Ms Mentor made the disclosure to certain
of its members. She retracted her evidence that she made the disclosure to Mr Cwele
Butchers (https://www.facebook.com/Bnagiahsbutchers/) that supplies mutton, lamb, chicken and fish but not beef
or pork, on large scale to the non-Muslim (i.e. predominantly Hindu and Christian) Indian community.
127
but insisted that she had disclosed the offer to the other two members she had
2018.169 He confirmed that Ms Mentor had made the allegation to him around August
2010. Mr Bloem testified before the Commission on day 49 and confirmed what he had
said in his statement.170 He said that Ms Mentor had asked him to treat what she had
told him as confidential. Mr Bloem kept the disclosure confidential until 2016, when Mr
Mcebisi Jonas and Ms Mentor publicly repeated their allegations. Mr Bloem then laid a
301. In a statement to the Commission, 172 Ms Mgabadeli said she could not recall any such
disclosure made to her by Ms Mentor. She also gave oral evidence where she said the
same thing.
confirmed that she and Ms Mentor were friends and that Ms Mentor frequently stayed
overnight with her but she could not remember the specific conversations described by
303. On 3 December 2018 the legal representatives of the Commission and witnesses and
several experts inspected the Saxonwold compound and recorded their observations in
various media. The observations made by various individuals on their visits were
recorded in various media and described during testimony as the inspection in loco of
the Commission.
304. For present purposes, the inspection is only of relevance to the extent that it casts light
305. Ms Erna Wiese, an architect employed by the Department of Public Works, carried out
an inspection at the Gupta compound ads part of a Public Works team and submitted
a report to the Commission dated 1 February 2019. The PWD team were particularly
looking to establish whether certain features which Ms Mentor said were present in the
property were in fact visible. These were: the steps to the main entrance; a pillar in the
waiting room; a striking mural; a large feature window; to adjacent guest cloakrooms,
with gilded features in the ladies’ cloakroom; an access door leading from the passage
306. The DPW team found none of the features in question to be present on 3 December
2018. They were asked to express an opinion on whether these features could have
been removed by alterations after August 2010. The DPW team concluded it had
insufficient expertise for this purpose and declined to express an opinion. The evidence
was as follows:
“CHAIRPERSON: Now bearing in mind the features that you had been asked to go
and see if they could be found in the property, in other words bearing in mind your
brief, did you find any of the features in the house that you had been asked to go
and establish whether they were there?
MS ERNA WIESE: No, Chair, we could not.
307.1. He admitted that he, Mr Rajesh Gupta and Mr Duduzane Zuma attended the
events forming part of the presidential state visit to China in August 2010.
307.3. He denied that he or his brother Rajesh would ever have said that they were
part of President Zuma’s advance guard or that they played an oversight role
307.4. He denied that he or Rajesh had more than one security tag or carried two way
307.5. He denied that he or Rajesh called Ms Mentor from the hotel lobby in China.
307.6. He denied that two of the Gupta brothers picked Ms Mentor up at the airport,
that she visited the offices of Sahara or that he later had a meeting with her at
the Saxonwold compound and that his family owned a black twin cab bakkie or
307.8. He admitted that the offer of space in the suite at Newlands cricket ground and
the offer of a cricket bat were the kind of things he did say, but he denied that
307.9. He denied that he owned or wore on his index finger a gold ring with a ruby. He
admitted that he wore other rings, one belonging to his late father which he
307.10. He denied that the description of the interior of the main house in the Saxonwold
specifically that there was a giant reception room in which she sat or that there
was any pillar of the type she described. He denied that the entrance area
contained any couches (on which Ms Mentor alleged she sat) and said that the
space was dominated by a grand piano covered in a red velvet cloth. He denied
308. He admitted that the Guptas had a chef but denied that anybody would have been
offered mutton curry in his home because he was strictly vegetarian and would not have
309. In denying the fact of the meeting, he denied that President Zuma entered the room in
310. He denied that he had been in partnership with any airline that could take over the SAA
route to India or that he ever had any interest in taking over that route.
131
311. I consider that there are too many unsatisfactory features in Ms Mentor’s evidence to
enable me to make a finding that she was made an offer of a Ministerial position by a
Gupta family member is true. Although there are features which count in her favour, in
my view, there is not enough to justify a finding that the incident did take place. The
Commission went to great lengths to try and establish from the record of airlines
whether she had travelled from Cape Town to Johannesburg on the day in question but
such evidence could not be found. No Parliamentary records about her trip could be
found that could corroborate her evidence that she had undertaken an official trip from
Cape Town to Johannesburg on the day in question. Most of the features of the Gupta
house that she had testified about or that she had included in her affidavit could not be
found when an inspection in loco was undertaken. Her two friends, Ms Mgabadeli and
Ms Nkosi did not corroborate her versions. The close friendship that she had had with
them for many years was such that in my view there is no way that she would not have
told them about what had happened to her at the Gupta residence if the incident had
happened and if she had told them, there is no way that both would not have
remembered that she had told them about such an incident. It seems to me that she
never told them. It is true that she told Mr Bloem but it strange that she told Mr Bloem
and did not tell even one of her two close friends.
312. I conclude that, on the probabilities and on the evidence before the Commission, the
incident did not happen and Ms Mentor was not offered a position as Minister of Public
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Evidence concerning mining and the Department of Mineral Resources ............... 137
Introduction
313. In Vol II of Part II of this Commission’s Report I had this to say about Mr Duduzane
Zuma (“Mr D Zuma”) and Mr Tony Gupta (referred to as either Tony or Rajesh):
He [Rajesh ‘Tony’ Gupta] would bring him [Duduzane Zuma] along to meetings that
he had with government officials attached to state owned entities and he would do
all the talking and Mr Duduzane Zuma would simply be there but not really take part
in the discussion. Mr Tony Gupta’s idea was that the government officials and SOE
officials would have realized that through Mr Duduzane Zuma he had easy access
to Mr Duduzane Zuma's father, President Zuma. In other words, they better co-
operate because otherwise, if they did not co-operate, their non-cooperation could
be reported to President Zuma.175
314. This observation is borne out in the evidence before the Commission in various
investigators. The evidence further shows how Mr D Zuma may have been central to
the capture of several SOEs, that he stood to gain personally from state capture and he
315. Mr D Zuma worked for several years at Sahara Computers, a Gupta company -
eventually becoming a director. He was 26 years old when he was appointed to the
Board of Mabengela Investments (Pty) Ltd in August 2008. This was followed by a
testified to the Commission about the role of former President Zuma in his appointment
and dismissal as the NDPP. The account of his tenure as NDPP reveals a stark example
of the extent of improper interference and disregard for the constitutional principle of
356. The appointment of the NDPP is governed by section 179 of the Constitution. It requires
of Parliament. The NDPP is the NPA's head. The President appoints the NDPP. Section
179(2) of the Constitution provides that the NPA has the power to institute criminal
proceedings on behalf of the state. Section 179(4) of the Constitution requires there to
be national legislation to ensure that the NPA exercises its functions without fear, favour
or prejudice. Section 9 of the National Prosecuting Authority Act222 (“the NPA Act”) sets
out the requirements of a person appointed as NDPP. Such person must be a South
African citizen and possess legal qualifications that entitle him or her to practise in all
courts in the Republic; and be a fit and proper person, with due regard to his or her
the office of the NDPP. The suspension and removal from office of the NDPP are
221 The evidence regarding this matter is found at Transcript 12 June 2019; Transcript 19 August 2019; Transcript
2 September 2019; and Exhibit EE 1-6. See also – Corruption Watch NPC and others v President of the
Republic of South Africa and others 2018 (10) BCLR 1179 (CC).
222 Act 32 of 1998.
THE GUPTAS’ PRIOR KNOWLEDGE OF MR MBALULA’S
394. On 31 October 2010 President Zuma announced an extensive Cabinet reshuffle. Some
of the Ministers he dropped from the Cabinet were Minister Barbara Hogan who was
the Minister of Public Enterprises, Minister Siphiwe Nyanda who was the Minister of
Communications and Minister Mdladlana who was the Minister of Labour and Minister
Malusi Gigaba replaced Minister Hogan as Minister of Public Enterprises. Minister Faith
Muthambi replaced Minister Nyanda and Minister Mildred Oliphant replaced Minister
Mdladlana as Minister of Labour. Mr Fikile Mbalula had been a Deputy Minister prior to
that Cabinet reshuffle. President Zuma appointed him as the Minister of Sports and
Recreation.
395. There was an allegation in the media that at a certain meeting of the National Executive
Committee of the ANC in 2011 Mr Fikile Mbalula had told those attending the meeting
that, prior to him being told by President Zuma that he was appointing him as Minister
of Sports and Recreation, he had been told by one of the Gupta brothers that he would
be promoted to the position of Minister of Sports and Recreation and had congratulated
him. One version heard by the Commission is that at the NEC meeting Mr Mbalula said
he had been told by Mr Ajay Gupta. Another version was that he told the NEC meeting
that he was with the Gupta brother concerned when the latter told him this news.
Another version is that the Gupta brother phoned him to tell him this development.
396. Term of Reference 1.3 of the Commissions Terms of Reference requires this
Commission to investigate and inquire into “whether the appointment of any member of
the National Executive, functionary and/or office bearer was disclosed to the Gupta
family or any other unauthorised person before such appointments were formally made
and/or announced, and if so, whether the President or any member of the National
i
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
481. This part of the Report relates to evidence that was heard by the Commission in respect
Government paid more than a million Rand in to the trust account of a law firm for
services allegedly rendered by that firm to that company but the law firm later paid that
amount in various amounts to various creditors of entities belonging to the wife of the
Government and sometime later the Head of Department of the Department of Finance
gives to the Provincial Treasurer of the African National Congress (ANC) as a donation
an amount exactly equal to the amount that the company to which the Water
Purification Tender had been given paid to the law firm which in turn is exactly the same
amount as the amount that the law firm paid in various amounts to the creditors of
entities belonging to the wife of the Head of the Department of the Department of
Finance.
482. Interestingly, the ANC Provincial Treasurer who admitted having received more than
R1m from the Head of Department of the Department of Finance as a donation to the
ANC never deposited the money in an ANC’s bank account nor did he have it registered
483. The terms of reference of the Commission were wide enough to investigate all
governments but it was not able to conduct investigations relating to the Provincial
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES GOVERNANCE OF STATE-OWNED
ENTERPRISES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
National Guide for the Appointment of Persons to Boards and Chief Executive
Officers of State-Owned and State-Controlled Institutions, September 2018 ......... 221
Evaluation of the File contents from the point of view of the Commission ............ 222
THE APPOINTMENT OF MEMBERS OF BOARDS OF SOEs AND CEOs, CFOs AND CPOs
OF SOEs
531. The evidence that has been heard by the Commission with regard to SOEs in the past
ten years or so has revealed, as will have been seen from Part I, II, and IV of this
Commission’s Report that, to a very large extent, the SOEs which were captured by the
Guptas were captured because some members of these Boards of those SOEs,
particularly their Chairpersons, as well as the Group Chief Executive Officers and Chief
Financial Officers were people who had no integrity and knowledge and experience
required for their position or were people who had the right knowledge, skills and
experience but simply lacked the integrity. Integrity is very important for people who get
appointed to these position because if you appoint people who have no integrity and
knowledge, skills and experience, you end up with what South Africa has ended up in
terms of the capture of those SOEs and the aftermath thereof. I referred to Part I, II and
IV of this Commission’s Report because it is in those parts that this Commission has
dealt with the evidence of capture of SOEs. In Part I we dealt with SAA and its subsidiary
companies. In Part II we dealt with Transnet and Denel. In Part IV we dealt with Eskom.
532. It is not only in SOEs that the Commission heard evidence that revealed this. The
effectively been captured by Bosasa to the extent that where there was a tender to be
issued to the public, they would not only inform BOSASA ahead of the public notice but
would actually ask BOSASA to prepare the specifications for the job and, of course
BOSASA would draw the specifications in such a way that only it could win the tender.
There was also the South African Revenue Service (SARS) that was led by Mr Tom