Proudly South African ambassadors (with visas) flying the flag aboard
These are the global citizens every country needs. My new young friend appears to be one of them. Now, if only he could land that damn Work Visa…
These are the global citizens every country needs. My new young friend appears to be one of them. Now, if only he could land that damn Work Visa…
Paul O’Sullivan and comrade in arms Lord Peter Hain are after global law firm Hogan Lovells which they say was the “go-to” shop for perpetrators of South Africa’s state capture. They won’t rest until it goes the way of bankrupted Bell Pottinger.
In his ninth book, How To Steal A Country, Lord Robin Renwick lets the facts speak for themselves, and then skilfully follows the advice of his friend Pravin Gordhan to ‘join the dots.’ It’s a well written easily flowing record of the young democracy’s darkest hour and how it managed to escape a very gloomy future.
Christopher Wylie, co-founder of the now infamous Cambridge Analytica, went public after realising the “cultural weapons” he’d helped build were directly responsible for subverting the democratic process.
Here’s a brilliant assessment of the state of South Africa by one of the country’s foremost analysts. Frans Cronje is the CEO of the Institute of Race Relations.
In a nutshell, Peter Hain reckons Hogan Lovells facilitated state capture by whitewashing an investigation for SARS.
Renowned anti-Apartheid activist, Lord Peter Hain, drove a very deep nail into the Zupta coffin in the UK’s House of Lords in November.
Ousted South African finance minister Pravin Gordhan has refused to accept KPMG’s apology – and is talking to his lawyers to ensure proper satisfaction is extracted from the Gupta auditors.
In this op-ed, Peter Hain references recent events in South Africa to ring a bell on money laundering. It is a message he warns the global financial community to heed.
SAP apologised “wholeheartedly and unreservedly” to the people of South Africa for bribes paid into the Zupta network of corruption.