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  1. #1
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    Default South Africa’s new security laws - who will they protect?

    24 May 2012

    By Jon Herskovitz


    Concerns are growing in South Africa that new laws on intelligence, security and graft-busting may end up protecting the political elite more than the nation.


    President Jacob Zuma’s ANC government has proposed three measures - two revisions to apartheid-era intelligence bills and a third on oversight of the police’s anti-graft unit, the Hawks - that have prompted concern data may be suppressed.


    The bills threaten reporters with jail for using sensitive government information, increase the powers of a circle around the president to keep a lid on secrets and could clip the wings of the elite Hawks, trained by the likes of the U.S. FBI.


    They are nowhere near as draconian as the laws drawn up under white minority rule, when the names of liberation struggle leaders such as Nelson Mandela and Walter Sisulu could not even appear in print.


    But some insiders see them as corrosive.


    "The priority of the pieces of legislation is not the stated protection of South Africa,” said a senior law enforcement official who asked not to be named. "They are aimed at protecting certain individuals within the ANC.”


    The government says the new laws are overdue and fears of abuse are not justified.


    "All work being done will continue to be done within the ambit of the Constitution and the rule of law and so we should not be alarmist in our approach to the reforms,” said Brian Dube, spokesman for the State Security Ministry.


    South Africa has a very healthy oversight system with regards to the intelligence services.”


    Investigative reporter Mzilikazi wa Afrika tested that oversight after he wrote articles about a suspect land deal that threatened the career of the chief of police.


    He was arrested, bundled into a police vehicle and accused of fraud, a move widely regarded as police intimidation. Charges were soon dropped when it appeared he had been set up, and more than a year later, the police chief was forced out after a government investigation concluded the land deal was illegal.


    Under the new laws, the alleged forged document wa Afrika was arrested for holding could have been declared a state secret, making it harder for him to argue, as he successfully did, that it had likely been planted.


    CORRUPTION CONCERN


    As the wa Afrika case shows, the concern is not so much about the legislation per se but what critics see as cracks in the bills that could open wide avenues for exploitation.


    It may take more than a year to implement all three, but as each comes into law in a parliament where the ANC has a commanding majority, they could strengthen Zuma’s hand for a presidency that could last until 2019.


    If he wins a bruising battle for the ANC leadership at the end of this year, he will likely be the party’s nominee for the 2014 presidential race, which the ANC will almost certainly win.


    "Because Zuma comes from an intelligence background in the ANC he is aware of the political value of intelligence. He needs to try to make sure intelligence cannot be used against him in his quest to be re-elected,” said Dirk Kotze, a political science professor at the University of South Africa.


    More than a third of the members of its National Executive Committee have faced corruption investigations and some of those have been convicted of graft.


    All three of the major global credit ratings agencies have downgraded South Africa’s outlook, citing increasing corruption.


    Reuel Khoza, chairman of South Africa’s fourth largest bank, Nedbank, echoed that concern. "Our political leadership’s moral quotient is degenerating and we are fast losing the checks and balances that are necessary to prevent a recurrence of the past,” he wrote in the bank’s annual report.


    Zuma has faced several corruption charges but has never been convicted. The government has launched a new investigation into an arms deal about a decade ago that put several ANC officials in jail for taking bribes. It is run by a team largely appointed by the presidency.


    Zuma says his conscience is clear and that the allegations are part of a conspiracy to discredit him.


    In 2006, then President Thabo Mbeki sacked his intelligence chief, saying his allies had been spied on to help tip the balance in favour of rival Zuma.


    Zuma then ousted Mbeki in the last ANC leadership race in 2007 and easily won election as the country’s president in 2009. He says the allegations of spying are politically motivated.


    In the most recent, Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula, a Zuma rival, said this month he suspected his phone was being tapped.


    The Protection of State Information Bill, which will soon become law, has riled South African media and activists.


    "The ... bill has been and continues to be seen as an obvious means of concealing the corruption that has become a way of South African life for many, from high-placed members of the government down to menial officials,” Nobel Prize literature laureate Nadine Gordimer wrote in the New York Review of Books.


    The bill was revised as it went through parliament to narrow the scope of what can be classified and add an independent Classification Review Panel to oversee the process.


    But the oversight could take years to set up and critics say it gives State Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele too much power.


    The opposition called for Cwele to be sacked after his wife was convicted in May last year of running an international drug ring. He said he was unaware of what she had been doing.


    "One has reservations about the ability of Minister Cwele to exercise his authority,” said Alf Lees, a member of parliament from the opposition Democratic Alliance.


    "The incident with his wife raises great concern for us.”


    Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe told parliament last year: "He (Cwele) wasn’t implicated in any way. The matter went through the courts and at no stage was he called in as a witness or a partner in that crime.”


    Critics say the General Intelligence Laws Amendment Bill now before parliament would put intelligence in the hands of a few people close to the president, and let them monitor, without court approval, "foreign signals", which they say could include phone calls abroad and emails routed through foreign servers.


    Even ANC MPs have said they were worried about how the new structures might be used. "There was a concern about the mandate to collect political intelligence,” parliament’s ANC-majority Ad Hoc Committee on General Intelligence, said in a statement.


    The final piece of legislation, the Police Service Amendment Bill, is aimed at satisfying a Constitutional Court decision to give more independence to the corruption-busting Hawks.


    The measure allows the police minister, appointed by the president, to sack the Hawks' leader and seek approval later at the ANC-dominated parliament. It also lets senior politicians in a ministerial committee coordinate Hawks investigations.


    "The legislation is good if you have good people and bad if you have bad people,” said Gareth Newham, who heads the crime and justice programme of the Institute for Security Studies.


    Asked to comment on the criticism, the presidency referred to the security ministry and an April address by Zuma in which he said the system had sufficient checks and balances.


    "The democratic state led by the African National Congress, will never undertake any activity or pass any law that undermines the security of the South African people, or which violates their Constitutional rights,” Zuma added.


    The president has come under fire over several of those he has chosen to be in his inner circle.


    He had to replace his police minister last year due to the land deal and the man he selected as National Director of Public Prosecutions was removed by a court which decided he was more beholden to the president than protecting the rule of law.


    The police were berated for this year reinstating Richard Mdluli as the head of its Crime Intelligence Unit, responsible for wiretaps and investigations, after he was suspended pending official investigations implicating him in fraud and nepotism.


    Police documents obtained by Reuters said Mdluli was suspected of illegally obtaining a fleet of luxury vehicles and placing relatives and mistresses on the police’s payroll.


    Mdluli protested his innocence, alleging a racist conspiracy by police and media to topple him, and the charges were dropped. The presidency has denied reports Mdluli was reinstated so he could use the office to protect Zuma.


    In parliamentary questioning this week, Zuma said the decision to reinstate Mdluli was a police matter. The acting police chief last week said he is moving to suspend Mdluli.


    A Western diplomat who asked not to be named said the biggest worry with the new bills was that freedoms in South Africa’s liberal Constitution are slowly being eroded.


    "This year will determine how South Africa will develop over the next 15 to 20 years,” the diplomat said.


    (Additonal reporting by Peroshni Govender and Cosmas Butunyi; editing by Philippa Fletcher) - Reuters

    http://www.peherald.com/news/article/6339


  2. #2
    Member curious george's Avatar
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    Default Re: South Africa’s new security laws - who will they protect?

    Former spook warns SA on spies

    July 26 2012 at 07:06pm
    By SAPA
    Comment on this story

    INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPERS
    Barry Gilder at the launch of his book Songs and Secrets in Cape Town. Picture: Leon Lestrade

    Cape Town - Western intelligence services are “actively involved” in trying to infiltrate South Africa's government, former senior spy master Barry Gilder said on Thursday.
    Responding to questions at a Cape Town Press Club luncheon, following the recent publication of his memoir, “Songs and Secrets”, he said this was done with the intention of influencing the South African government's decisions.
    “On the international stage, and this is normal for most countries, there are countries who would want us to think and behave in ways that serve their interests. I'm not just talking about the big Western countries, but other countries too.
    “And I can tell you, as a former spook, that the intelligence services of the big European/Western countries are very actively involved in trying to infiltrate our government and other parts of society, but in particular (they are) trying to influence it.”
    Gilder served as general manager and then director-general of the SA Secret Service from 1995 to 1999, and from 2000 to 2003 as director-general: operations for the National Intelligence Agency.
    He did not name the countries, and declined to say any more on the matter.
    “If you want to get more out of me, you'll have to torture me,” he joked.
    Earlier, Gilder said there was “still a hidden hand” affecting South Africa's ability to transform itself into a more equitable nation.
    Asked to explain, he said there were “specifics... of strange things that have happened” that one could point to, including the “hoax e-mail saga, the Browse 'Mole' Report, the Meiring Report, and a number (of) others that I recollect”.
    The “hoax e-mail saga” is a reference to alleged hoax e-mails implicating senior African National Congress members in a conspiracy against ANC president Jacob Zuma.
    The Browse “Mole” Report, a product of the Directorate of Special Operations, also known as the Scorpions, was written in 2006. It was leaked the next year. Among other things, it alleged that the Angolan intelligence establishment planned covertly to support Jacob Zuma, who at the time was deputy president, in his bid for the presidency.
    The so-called Meiring Report was handed to then president Nelson Mandela in 1998, by former SA National Defence Force chief George Meiring. It alleged there were left-wing elements plotting a coup against the government.
    Gilder said these had all indicated to the intelligence community at the time that “there are certainly people out there actively trying in some ways to create divisions or to create confusion to undermine our democracy in different ways”.
    He described this as a “plain historical reality”, stemming from South Africa's divided past.
    “April 27, 1994, didn't mean those divisions suddenly dissolved. They continued, to some extent, and expressed themselves in different ways in society.”
    He added that it was not a “conspiratorial hidden hand” to which he was referring, but it was a reality that there were people in the country opposed to the current dispensation.
    After serving on the national executive council of the National Union of SA Students in the early Seventies, Gilder went into exile in 1976.
    He served with the ANC's intelligence division in various capacities until his return to South Africa in 1991.
    Gilder retired from government service in 2007. - Sapa

    http://www.iol.co.za/news/politics/f...pies-1.1350160

    *Yawn,guess who's towing the party line....

    Yes governments spy on each other,nothing new,but the whole hinting at a foreign conspiracy in addition to our eternal favourate,the "3rd force".All this tripe,ermm...sorry disclosure by this guy....

    Oh,by complete coincidence,he's launching a book and btw,remember his job is/was to lie and to be paranoid for a living.

    So,is it about the book,or when is the info law being voted on again...?

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