There is clear and compelling evidence that Mo Shaik is not suitable for any role in the public service, least of all the intelligence services.
He represents a faction inside the ANC and has a history of using what appears to be fabricated evidence to protect Jacob Zuma and malign his opponents. This is not what South Africa needs. We need a Secret Service that is loyal to the public and its interests and that always acts to put the country's needs ahead of the factional agenda of a particular element of the ruling party. We also need leaders who are beyond reproach, who are accountable and upstanding. If these requirements are not met, it will not only be our intelligence services that suffer as a result but the public's faith in them.
There are two particular incidents in which Mo Shaik seems to have played a prominent role and which have consequences for his ability to properly and fairly fulfil the requirements of his new position as head of South African Secret Service.
The Hefer Commission
The first concerns the allegations made against former National Director of Public Prosecutions, Bulelani Ngcuka, by Mo Shaik (himself a former ANC intelligence operative) and Mac Maharaj, that Ngcuka was an apartheid spy. The allegations were based on documents for an ANC operation called ‘The Bible Project', an initiative which had fallen under the direct supervision of Jacob Zuma, while the ANC was in exile. As a consequence of those allegations, President Mbeki set up the Hefer Commission of Inquiry in October 2003.
Mark Gevisser, in his biography of Mbeki, describes the Commission as follows: