/ 28 November 2000

Yengeni cracks whip over ‘unfair’ reports

OWN CORRESPONDENT, Pretoria | Tuesday

LAWYERS for African National Congress chief whip Tony Yengeni have threatened to launch a defamation case unless the Sunday Times newspaper retracts a weekend report which suggested that he attempted to squash a probe into South Africa’s R43bn arms deal.

Yengeni’s legal representative, Mallinicks Attorneys, said in a statement: “The report is fundamentally inaccurate and/or untrue and unfair and is both defamatory and injurious.”

Yengeni has demanded that the Sunday Times publish an unqualified retraction and apology or face a defamation suit.

The report, quoting unnamed ANC sources, said Yengeni and other senior party members had told colleagues who sat on the public accounts committee that the probe was not in the interest of the ANC or the government.

It said Yengeni had attempted to pressure members of the public accounts committee to suspend their investigation into the deal, but had been rebuffed by Deputy President Jacob Zuma.

Zuma apparently told Yengeni to stop interfering after he reportedly refused to authorise travel expenses for members of the committee to travel to Pretoria to meet the four investigating units.

Yengeni apparently reversed the decision after Zuma intervened.

Yengeni’s representative Dennis Cruywagen said there had been no attempt to stop the investigation.

A report allegedly drawn up by disgruntled ANC members and leaked to Pan Africanist Congress MP Patricia de Lille last year fingered Yengeni and a host of other ANC leaders as having received kickbacks in the arms deal.

Yengeni was formerly chairman of Parliament’s joint committee on defence.

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