Shabby sheik stirs up Durban Country Club

160809 Shabir Shaik enjoys the winter sun in Durban while enjoying his lunch at the Debonairs on the beachfront. Picture. Adrian de Kock

160809 Shabir Shaik enjoys the winter sun in Durban while enjoying his lunch at the Debonairs on the beachfront. Picture. Adrian de Kock

Published Jun 13, 2015

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Durban Country Club members may not be happy to have him, but the greens will be livelier with convicted fraudster Schabir Shaik around, writes William Saunderson-Meyer.

 Durban - Groucho Marx memorably said that he would not ever want to belong to any club that would be so undiscriminating as to have him as a member. That’s clearly not a life philosophy shared by Schabir Shaik, former financial bagman for President Jacob Zuma and now paroled convict.

A birdie whispered in my ear that Shaik had applied for membership of the august Durban Country Club (DCC), founded in 1922 and of which the golf course is rated among the top 100 in the world. There’s a great deal of unhappiness among some members at the prospect of having to rub shoulders with the Shabby Sheik - who was in 2005 sentenced to 15 years in prison for fraud and corruption but served only 28 months, most of it in a comfortably appointed private hospital suite.

Shaik was granted a medical parole in 2009 because he was supposedly terminally ill with a heart complaint. Since then he has become cardiology’s poster boy for the miraculously recuperative effects of power shopping and aggressive golfing.

Aware of the outrage over Shaik’s application, the DCC, which counts among its members the cream of Durban’s legal and business fraternities, has tried to handle it as discreetly as possible. But already a petition is circulating, demanding that Shaik be turned down.

As is the custom, Shaik has been granted temporary membership while his application is scrutinised. However, the DCC has met him and warned that there is “a groundswell” against him being accepted, though he will be given an opportunity to address the objections.

The petition, already signed by about five dozen members, notes that Shaik, albeit on parole, is a “convicted criminal whose sentence still has many years to run”. Should his application be granted it would “cause much adverse comment” among the media and the public, which “may well bring the club into disrepute and tarnish its good name”.

The petition also demands that the DCC board and membership committee investigate the “truth or otherwise of golf-related allegations” made against Shaik. This presumably refers to two incidents in which Shaik was accused of assault. In 2011, Sunday Tribune journalist Amanda Khoza and freelance photographer Charmel Bowman were tipped off that Shaik was possibly contravening his parole by playing at the Papwa Sewgowlum golf course in Durban. When they approached him, Shaik reportedly grabbed Khoza around the neck and slapped her.

A month later at a Durban mosque he allegedly slapped and punched Mahomed Ismail, whose vehicle had been parked in by Shaik. Although charges were not pressed, Shaik was arrested and held by Correctional Services for 72 hours and asked to explain his actions.

In 2013, there was another incident at the Papwa Sewgowlum. The police were called after a caddie claimed that Shaik – whose belligerence had by then on social media earned the sobriquet of “South Africa’s Chuck Norris” – had beaten him with a golf club, trampled him with spiked golf shoes and called him a “k***r”. According to The Mercury, the caddie opened a case but it was withdrawn after he accepted R500 in settlement.

At the time, Shaik was quoted in The Star as saying, “I play at golf courses all over KwaZulu-Natal, but it is only at Papwa where they have a problem. If I had a Chuck Norris syndrome, surely I would be having a problem with all the caddies at all the golf courses in KZN?”

In the light of Shaik’s apparent low tolerance of golfing frustrations, it is not surprising that DCC golfers are skittish. And since parole conditions routinely forbid parolees from being on licensed premises, DCC has stipulated that Shaik must procure a letter from Correctional Services stating that his membership would not be in violation of his parole regulations.

But as it fortuitously – and no doubt coincidentally – happens, Correctional Services this week relaxed his parole conditions. A Correctional Services spokesperson said that they had not had “any problem (with Shaik) in the last number of months” and as a result of this, he was entitled to eased conditions.

No doubt to celebrate the pleasing result of his streak of good behaviour, Shaik promptly threatened to headbutt a journalist interviewing him regarding the parole changes. In a tirade directed at News24’s reporter Giordano Stolley, Shaik warned, “I will kick you in your poes” – using the Afrikaans term for female genitals – and “I will break you, white boy.”

Given this history, the DCC’s manicured greens will certainly be enlivened by Shaik’s antics. And given his apparent rude good health, it seems he is more likely to be causing heart attacks, rather than being the victim of one.

 

* William Saunderson-Meyer’s column The Jaundiced Eye appears in Independent Media’s Saturday publications.

** Follow WSM on Twitter @TheJaundicedEye

*** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.

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