‘R1bn cop HQ lease to Zuma’s friend’

Public Works Minister Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde has failed to meet her own deadline to comment on the Public Protector's report into the police's lease agreement for Pretoria's Middestad Building. Photo: Independent Newspapers

Public Works Minister Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde has failed to meet her own deadline to comment on the Public Protector's report into the police's lease agreement for Pretoria's Middestad Building. Photo: Independent Newspapers

Published Apr 20, 2011

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Public Works Minister Gwen Mahlangu-Nkabinde’s department signed off on a R1.1 billion lease with President Jacob Zuma’s long-standing friend, property mogul Roux Shabangu, for new police headquarters in Durban less than a month after she came into office.

Her predecessor, Geoff Doidge – now South Africa’s ambassador to Sri Lanka – put the deal on ice in September last year, along with the R500 million lease agreement for new SA Police Service headquarters in Pretoria, pending probes by the Special Investigating Unit and the Public Protector. Doidge was axed in Zuma’s cabinet reshuffle on October 31.

The 27-storey building in Anton Lembede Street in Durban’s CBD was bought by Donview Trading in March last year for R50m, according to advocate Stoffel Fourie, head of the Public Protector’s good governance and integrity unit. The company’s name was later changed to Roux Property Fund, Fourie said.

“The transfer of the ownership of the building never went through because, as part of the agreement there were certain guarantees, but he (Shabangu) couldn’t comply with the conditions,” Fourie said.

Yet, on November 26 last year, a provincial Department of Public Works official and a representative from Shabangu’s company concluded an agreement to lease the building at a cost of R1.1bn for a period of nine years and 11 months.

The lease agreement was, however, cancelled last month – soon after Public Protector Thuli Madonsela released her findings on the investigation into the disputed lease agreement for the new Pretoria SAPS headquarters – a building owned by Shabangu.

Fourie, the chief investigator in the Public Protector’s current investigation into the Durban building, said it was yet to be established whether Public Works or Shabangu’s company had decided to terminate the lease, or whether they had “mutually agreed” to do so. He said the lease agreement could not continue because Shabangu had not become the official owner of the property.

He confirmed that national police commissioner General Bheki Cele had signed off on the needs analysis for the building.

In her report on the Pretoria lease, released in February, Madonsela found that while Cele had not signed the lease agreement, as the accounting officer he was “solely responsible” to ensure that the proper procedures were followed and that his conduct was “improper, unlawful and amounted to maladministration”.

Mahlangu-Nkabinde’s role came under scrutiny because she approved the deal despite the opinion of two counsel that the lease agreement was not lawful.

Approached for comment yesterday, Shabangu responded angrily.

“It has nothing to do with anybody what I do with my money… Whether I bought the building or had bought the building has nothing to do with you or anybody for that matter.

“I don’t have to explain myself to anybody… I don’t give s*** about all of the s*** you have been asking me. Write your s***. I don’t give a s***, I don’t give a chicken s*** what you write.

“I have not stolen one thing, not one cent from anybody. If you say you serve the interest of the people of South Africa, you should write the truth. We have a joint responsibility to be accountable,” added Shabangu.

Prior to his outburst, he could neither confirm nor deny that his company had entered into the R1.1bn lease with public works or why the contract had been cancelled.

Shabangu said it was important for South Africa to know that the lease for the Durban building was now out to tender.

“I’m not even going to talk about that, you don’t know what’s happening, the deal is out on tender.

“Your sources are sleeping, they must be aware of what’s happening, the deal is out there. How can I have a deal that is out there?”

public works national media director Thamsanqa Mchunu said: “There is no building for which the Department of Public Works has signed a lease for the SAPS in Durban.”

Neither Cele not his spokeswoman, Nonkululeko Mbatha, answered calls made to them.

Fourie said the investigation was at an advanced stage, with only two more witnesses still to be interviewed.

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