Africa

SA corruption whistle blower flees for his life

A South African (SA) whistle blower who testified at a state inquiry into massive corruption allegations has left the country fearing for his life.

“If I remained at home there was a good chance I’d be silenced, so I left,” Athol Williams said.

He named 39 people and companies involved in the scandal.

A public inquiry investigating corruption during the presidency of Jacob Zuma has heard from multiple witnesses.

The Zondo Commission – named after the judge chairing the inquiry – was set up in 2018 to investigate allegations of corruption and fraud in the public sector, including government institutions.

Zuma was convicted of contempt for refusing to appear before the commission. He was jailed but then freed on medical parole. He faced numerous charges of corruption which he denied.

Mr Williams, a former ethics lecturer, is among 278 witnesses who have testified at the public inquiry.

“Knowing that my government offers me no protection after I’ve acted in the public interest is a disturbing reality. I implicated 39 parties in my testimony so threats could come from many places,” he said in a statement published on Sunday.

He described hugging his family members in tears before boarding a flight out the country.

Mr Williams added that the killing of another whistle blower, Babita Deokaran, in August, who had exposed alleged corruption in a different scandal, convinced him that his protection was not guaranteed.

Ms. Deokaran, a senior finance official in the health department of Gauteng province, was shot several times outside her home in Johannesburg.

It is suspected that she was targeted because she was a witness in an ongoing investigation into fraudulent contracts worth 332m rand ($23m; £17m) awarded by her department to buy personal protective equipment to help stop the spread of corona virus.

Six people have been charged with her murder.

At the time President Cyril Ramaphosa described her as “a hero and a patriot” and said her killing was “a stark reminder of the high stakes involved in our collective quest to remove this cancer from our society.

Mr Williams, who reportedly left South Africa on November 1, accused the authorities of “choosing not to” protect whistle blowers.

He said there was a narrative that “only a few bad apples” were involved in corruption. -BBC

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