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Malema and Shivambu VBS scandal — the point of no return?

The publication of an affidavit from the former chair of VBS detailing how, on his version, he paid money to the EFF’s top two leaders is bound to put Julus Malema and Floyd Shivambu under more pressure than ever before. While the EFF will defend its leaders and point to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala cash, it is battling to explain why it received so much money from the proceeds of crime.
Malema and Shivambu VBS scandal — the point of no return?

Last Thursday night, Scorpio’s Pauli van Wyk published an affidavit composed and signed by former VBS chair Tshifhiwa Matodzi.

In the document, he explains that he asked to meet the leadership of the EFF because they had been attacking his bank after it lent money to former president Jacob Zuma to repay the debt he incurred through the Nkandla scandal.

Matodzi says at that meeting he agreed to make payments to the EFF’s leadership. In the end, on his version, he told them they had to open an account at VBS and he would “donate” R5-million immediately, with further regular payments of R1-million a month.

In the end, as Van Wyk has reported, Julius Malema and Floyd Shivambu decided some of the money should be paid into an account controlled by Shivambu’s brother Brian Shivambu.

Years later, Brian Shivambu had to admit that he had received the money for no good reason and repaid it.

Since the publication of Matodzi’s affidavit, the EFF eventually felt compelled to respond. It did this through its former national chairperson, the advocate Dali Mpofu.

In his defence of Malema and Shivambu, Mpofu starts by saying that Matodzi is a convicted criminal.

This is, of course, true. Matdozi will serve the first day of 15 years in prison this week — a sentence which presumably would have been much longer had he not written the affidavit.

Mpofu then claims that while Malema and Shivambu did meet with Matodzi to discuss their attacks on VBS, there is no link between the attacks on VBS and Matodzi’s decision to give the EFF what Mpofu says was a donation.

Mpofu claims that Matodzi met the EFF leadership and that at the meeting, it was agreed that the EFF would no longer attack VBS because they now understood the bank’s position.

At that same meeting, says Mpofu, Matodzi said he wanted to give the EFF a donation — but this had nothing to do with the EFF ceasing its attacks on VBS. 

Mpofu goes on to explain why the money was not paid into an account controlled by the EFF. It would seem rational that the simplest way for the EFF to receive donations from VBS would be for the EFF (presumably through its treasurer-general) to open an account at VBS.

What happened to the money?


Instead, the money went into an account of the company Sgameka, controlled by Brian Shivambu, and not the EFF directly.

This gets to the heart of one of the questions around the VBS payments to the EFF: What was the money spent on?

As Van Wyk has reported, at least some of the money was used by Malema and Shivambu personally.

Money cannot be said to be a donation to the EFF if Malema used it to buy clothing by Gucci and Le Coq Sportif at Sandton City.

https://youtu.be/O3QIacJTj10

In response to questions about why the EFF’s leadership chose for the money to be paid into the Sgameka account, Mpofu told SAfm on Monday: “It doesn’t matter which vehicle is used for a donation. That’s not a crime either, by the way…

“Just like the donations given in the CR17 campaign, that R1-billion, all of that money was given through SPVs [special purpose vehicles]… But it is not a crime, no, it’s not a crime that the money should come through a particular entity.”

However, this still does not explain why the money went this route.

What was the benefit of going through an account controlled by the brother of the EFF’s deputy leader rather than the party receiving the money directly?

Mpofu’s insistence that this is “not a crime” suggests the EFF can no longer argue only the politics of the issue. Mpofu is now arguing the law. This suggests Malema and Shivambu’s main interest will soon have to move away from defending this politically, to defending themselves against a criminal charge.

Also implicit in Mpofu’s comments since the publication of Matodzi’s affidavit is the admission that the EFF did receive money from VBS.

This is not what the party said when this was first reported in 2018.

A plain lie


Then, Floyd Shivambu said, “For the record, I have never received R10-million from VBS or anyone in my personal account… I have no dealing with VBS and any attempt to link the EFF to the bank for cheap political points is a clear sign of desperation and soon enough people will see through it.” 

Then came what is now known to be a plain lie:

“I have no dealings with VBS and attempts to link the EFF position to business dealings are disingenuous and patently weak.”

This shows how the EFF’s position has had to change as a result of the publication of Matdozi’s affidavit.

While Mpofu may preface his comments with the point that Matodzi is a convicted criminal, the fact is, he confirmed that the EFF did receive money from VBS.

This comes at a difficult time for the EFF and its leadership.

The EFF is currently the second-biggest opposition party in Parliament and is outside the coalition government, sitting next to Zuma’s uMkhonto Wesizwe.

Its hopes at the beginning of the year that it would be in the national government have disappeared.

The EFF is not even in any provincial coalitions.

And there are indications that the ANC is preparing to end its “working agreements” with the EFF in local government in Gauteng metros. If this happens, Malema’s proximity to power will be weakened still further.

Previously, Malema’s main strategy would have been to use a big state event, such as this week’s opening of Parliament, to try to change the subject, through disruption or some other spectacle.

However, just a month ago, Malema promised he would not disrupt Parliament in the future.

It will be hard to go against that now.

Even if he did want to do that, he might find that the MK caucus, bigger than his own, wins more attention.

This means the EFF will continue to try to change the subject via other means. This may well see a continued focus on other scandals and in particular, Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala money.

While Ramaphosa has never properly explained the cash in his sofa, this does nothing to absolve the EFF.

The next key moment may be in the hands of the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA).

While this information has been in the public domain for five years, it is only now that one of those involved in the VBS scandal has explained under oath what happened. This could present the NPA with the ammunition it needs.

It should not be forgotten that while the EFF is the focus of much of the reporting about Matodzi’s affidavit, this scandal was always primarily about the ANC.

Senior members of the party’s provincial leadership in Limpopo, including then treasurer Danny Msiza, were heavily implicated.

This means that any move by the NPA to charge Malema and Shivambu will have to include ANC leaders.

While there will be public pressure, correctly, on the NPA to act, it will be relying on the testimony of those who have pleaded guilty to a series of crimes.

This could make the court proceedings difficult.

That said, it seems impossible for the NPA not to act, not after such a bombshell. While Mpofu and the EFF may claim that no crime was committed, it remains wholly unexplained why VBS paid so much money to Malema and Shivambu. DM

Comments

Kevin Venter Jul 16, 2024, 05:58 AM

This just shows how badly corrupt the whole aparatus is. The EFF does have a point that they are being singled out when others have their own cases to answer. The names Cyril Ramaphosa, Ace Magashule, Paul Mashatile, Panyaza Lesufi, all come to mind to name only a few. The very definition of moral and ethical behaviour is doing the right thing even when nobody is watching. This shows the moral fibre of both the EFF and the ANC, when nobody is watching they will grab what they can. It is really a case of pointing a finger and 3 pointing back. At the end of the day, the country has been limping along for 30 years because of corruption and cadre deployment. This means we have the worst people in positions of responsibility who are completely incompetent to do the job bestowed on them. It cannot continue like this or else it is going to end in civil war or a dictatorial coup. A classic example is the case of Angie Motshega being put as the minister of Defence, a teacher, who single handedly wrecked the education system in South Africa. She clearly knows nothing about education let alone defence. The corruption and abhorrent incompetence has to be rooted out and stopped. It is now so well entrenched that even if we are able to stop new corruption, removing it from all the arms of government is going to take decades. I can only hope and pray that the GNU and new non-ANC eyes in all areas of government means that the necessary change is coming, time will tell. The GNU seems to be held together with sticky tape right now. Make no mistake though, the rot goes all the way to the top, Ramaphosa also needs to answer for Phala Phala as well as Marikana and probably more than that too.

Dennis Bailey Jul 16, 2024, 07:02 AM

Don’t count your chickens, we live in corruption crippled economy of epic proportion. I doubt that these scoundrels, protected by judges and clever Mpofu, will ever don orange. The overalls they wear for clowning in parliament are a ruse and worn under sufferance. Gucci is worn beneath.

Paddy Ross Jul 16, 2024, 01:40 PM

Mpofu clever?

David van Wyk Jul 17, 2024, 03:46 PM

Mphofu is the cleverest of them all, one ring to bind them and free-dom-all. The struggle to hide the looting continues.

Colin Braude Jul 16, 2024, 11:23 AM

100%

Con Tester Jul 16, 2024, 01:57 PM

Correction: Angie Motshekga didn't singlehandedly ruin basic education in South Africa; she had the eager help and participation of SADTU in that venture.

M D Fraser Jul 18, 2024, 01:25 PM

100% correct. She is hardly literate herself. Can't wait to see what a mess she makes of the SANDF.

Con Tester Jul 16, 2024, 02:03 PM

To paraphrase David Hume: "Which is more likely: that the whole natural order of political and business practices in South Africa should be turned on its head, or that a clumsy lawyer/polyptician should lie?"

riannawentze Jul 16, 2024, 07:02 AM

"An evil man will burn his own nation to the ground to rule over the ashes." ~ Sun Tzu~

Jeff Robinson Jul 16, 2024, 07:48 AM

Hey Stephen. I have great respect for the work you do both as a radio presenter and a journalist. But what disturbs me with your DM pieces is not content but form, i.e. a long succession of single sentences. Paragraphs, employed properly, give more cogency to what is written for the simple reason that sentences vary from being key points, to supporting points, to qualifications, caveats and conclusions. Your pieces end up as pastiches with decreased effectiveness as essays/editorials/arguments.

superjase Jul 16, 2024, 08:35 AM

while you make a valid point, i for one like the more disjointed nature of stephen's writing style. it slows things down. remember, he is a radio presesenter / talk show host who also appears in video interviews, and his writing style will proabably always reflect that. his writing feels like a person talking. in my mind i can hear him talking, pausing, and allowing a point to settle with the listener before continuing. in any event, there is huge disagreement in the wiriting community about the use of single-sentence paragraphs. many reputable outlets and writers make frequent use of them. others are loudly critical. feel free to criticise his writing - especially since your criticism is cogent, constructive and helpful. but i'm going to throw my support behind his current style ;) (and yes, an emoticon or emoji is a valid replacement for an end-of-sentence punctuation mark.) [removes tongue from cheek]

Kel Varnsen Jul 16, 2024, 05:08 PM

Anyone who starts a message stating ‘Hey XYZ’ doesn’t deserve a response. Hey is not an introduction. I have seen how it is has become more commonplace, even in work environments, and it is deplorable.

Kel Varnsen Jul 16, 2024, 05:08 PM

Anyone who starts a message stating ‘Hey XYZ’ doesn’t deserve a response. Hey is not an introduction. I have seen how it is has become more commonplace, even in work environments, and it is deplorable.

Sean Coetzee Jul 17, 2024, 08:58 PM

Stephen, don't go changin', please keep your writing style. "Hey", is how you start a Whatsapp message.

Ian Gwilt Jul 16, 2024, 08:43 AM

i get confused here VBS gives money to Brian Brian gives it to JuJu and Floyd, they spend it. Years later Brian is forced to pay back the money. If Floyd and JuJu spent it , where did Brian get the repayment money from ? Was there any tax paid anywhere on all of this ? Does the Nkandla crooner keep up to date with his bond repayments to the liquidator ?

Kevin Venter Jul 16, 2024, 08:53 AM

Brian pays back the money from the "other" stash of money that has been acquired through similar methods. Paying back the money then somehow exonerates him of wrongdoing? Where is the rule of law that when money is laundered through fictitious companies and transactions that the guilty are sentenced to jail terms. Of the Nkandla crooner, the money was handed out knowing full well that it would never be repaid and probably treated as a bad debt which contibutes to the bank folding. The band keeps playing while the ship sinks.

rehke Jul 16, 2024, 11:34 AM

Surely an admission of guilt.

Ian Gwilt Jul 16, 2024, 08:43 AM

i get confused here VBS gives money to Brian Brian gives it to JuJu and Floyd, they spend it. Years later Brian is forced to pay back the money. If Floyd and JuJu spent it , where did Brian get the repayment money from ? Was there any tax paid anywhere on all of this ? Does the Nkandla crooner keep up to date with his bond repayments to the liquidator ?

Hidden Name Jul 16, 2024, 09:03 AM

The affidavits, regardless of origin provide enough evidence of fraud and corruption to justify forensic audits of all the related entities. That they originate from convicted criminals is largely irrelevant. The NPA, through the courts, could request such (as a matter of fact, I am surprised SARS didnt do exactly this years ago - no, thats not true....I am not at all surprised)

Miss Jellybean Jul 16, 2024, 12:17 PM

SARS only go after soft targets - ie: law abiding tax payers who can't afford to fight them

William Kelly Jul 16, 2024, 07:30 PM

Spot on!

Middle aged Mike Jul 16, 2024, 09:05 AM

The SA electorate is perfectly happy to pick skelms to lead them. Can't imagine that this will change anything.

Ritchie Morris Jul 16, 2024, 09:06 AM

If Dali Mpofu was the Chairman of EFF from 2014 to 2019, as web sites show, and the crime occurred in this period, with him confirming on radio that a 'small' part or 'some' of the money did go to the EFF, he must have known about the 'donation' (bribe) coming in from VBS. SO: is he not complicit in the crime? How much did he benefit from the lavish spending?

Hidden Name Jul 16, 2024, 09:21 AM

Thats quite a good point, actually. Would he not also be of necessity be struck off the LP lists and no longer able to practice law? Pretty sure that would be a significant violation of their "oath"...

Confucious Says Jul 16, 2024, 09:13 AM

Pity it's taking so long to hang these liars in the square! Right from their outset, they have been as crooked as paperclips! Hundreds of thousands or Rands on clothes and jewellery and excess... on government pay! Noise as camouflage! Let's get real! Put them a way and make an example of them!

Glyn Morgan Jul 16, 2024, 11:44 AM

Only one way to do that. Get the DA into power in the next elections. Think! Wait! Pounce!!

Gordon Pascoe Jul 16, 2024, 03:30 PM

"While there will be public pressure, correctly, on the NPA to act, it will be relying on the testimony of those who have pleaded guilty to a series of crimes". Surely it's more of a case of "following the money"?

Tshepang Moloi Jul 16, 2024, 07:30 PM

The peculiarity of the whole scandal is that the NPA has a insurmountable tasks of amassing compelling evidence, beyond deposed affidavits of Matodzi, to cement an allegation that EFF received donations from VBS or its leaders siphoned the money for self use. Interestingly, EFF leaders are confronted with the heavy duty of rebutting these allegations in a court of law, suffice to indicate that means of receiving donations via Skamega were, presumably, just strategic device to conceal the intended receivers.

Shirley Gobey Jul 17, 2024, 09:39 AM

The evidence is already there. The Liquidator followed the money and Pauli van Wyk has evidence on how it was spent. The affidavit merely confirms what they already know.

Shirley Gobey Jul 17, 2024, 09:39 AM

The evidence is already there. The Liquidator followed the money and Pauli van Wyk has evidence on how it was spent. The affidavit merely confirms what they already know.

Joe Soap Jul 16, 2024, 08:24 PM

If one calls in Dali then we all no there is no case. We can already see it, playing all the usual dirty tricks. If Julius goes to jail that will be huge win for the fight against crime. All of a sudden everyone will be walkin the straight and narrow.

Sydney Kaye Jul 16, 2024, 10:50 PM

When I see Malema’s sneering face and hear his arrogant barking voice I don’t see a clown suit and a red beret I see a brown shirt , and a red arm band with a white circle and black swastika. I am still embarrassed thinking of Adv. Unterhalter calling him “commissioner” at the JSC hearing and answering his insolent questions instead of confronting him.

Charlie Victor Jul 17, 2024, 06:27 AM

Please, these crooks are thick skinned and bereft of any morality. They will laugh this off, slink into the darkness for a time and once this has blown over, and it will, re-emerge. They will claim attack by counter- revolutionaries, wmc etc etc. They will still dupe enough supporters and carry on living the Gucci life.