Ramaphosa must respond to Sarb on farm heist by Sept 8

The South African Reserve Bank (Sarb) has asked legal advisers for President Cyril Ramaphosa to respond by September 8 to requests for further information as it probes the theft of an unspecified foreign currency from a game farm he owns.

The Financial Surveillance Department (FSD), which administers exchange-control regulations, expects to proceed with its investigation once the responses are received, Governor Lesetja Kganyago said in a letter to the opposition Democratic Alliance on Tuesday.

The party forwarded the letter to Bloomberg by mobile phone.

The theft at Ramaphosa’s farm in the northern Limpopo province in February 2020 was revealed in June by the former head of the State Security Agency, Arthur Fraser, who filed charges against the president for allegedly concealing the crime.

Fraser claimed that $4 million was stolen.

The FSD initially asked Ramaphosa’s advisers on 20 June for details on the origin of the foreign currency and any transaction it may pertain to, according to Kganyago’s letter.

After being given 21 days to respond with a 15-day extension, the department received responses from the advisers to which the request for further information was sent, he said.

Read:
Opposition unites to demand Ramaphosa answers over farm burglary
Ramaphosa’s new anti-corruption council to improve public trust
Cattle sale that dragged Ramaphosa into political storm is back

Ramaphosa has declined to answer lawmakers’ questions about the incident, including at a parliamentary session on Tuesday, and said the law must be allowed to take its course.

The South African Police Services’ Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation, known as the Hawks, said last week it has obtained 41 statements as part of its ongoing investigation into the matter.

The FSD’s 8 September deadline will come a day before opposition parties are set to march to the office of the anti-graft ombudsman to demand the release of its report on the incident.

Read:
Zero convictions, nine years after the Gupta Waterkloof landing
Over 22 000 cases valued at R1.5trn under Hawks investigation

© 2022 Bloomberg

Source: moneyweb.co.za