Over the past few days the public reputation of (now ex) African National Congress national spokesperson, Carl Niehaus, has unravelled in the most spectacular way. Niehaus was appointed by the ANC on November 11 2008. He was obliged to devote much of his time over the following few months to making the case that Jacob Zuma was fit for office despite the serious corruption charges the ANC president was facing.
On Friday the ANC's spin doctor himself became the centre of a news cycle that went into overdrive following revelations by the Mail & Guardian of the chaotic state of his financial affairs. Niehaus, it seems, had lived way beyond his means for many years despite being able to trade on his ANC connections to secure highly lucrative positions in the state and private sector. In order to cover his debts he begged loans from a number of ANC luminaries, and also received money from Brett Kebble. The Mail & Guardian noted that "over the past decade he has resigned from most jobs under pressure or earlier than his contract stipulated because of debt or mismanagement of his financial affairs." His former employers included Deloitte and Touche, the Presidency, the Rhema Church, and the Gauteng Economic Development Agency (GEDA).
The apparent nadir was reached in 2005 when as head of GEDA he forged the signatures of a number of Gauteng government officials in an effort to secure a personal loan from a property development company. He desperately needed the money, he told the newspaper, in order to settle a debt of R700,000 owed to his previous employers at the Rhema Church.
The following day the Saturday Star claimed that in 2004 Niehaus lied to the law firm where he was employed as an empowerment and transformation consultant (at R100,000 a month) to get it to pay for a return business class ticket to London for himself and his then wife Linda Thango. Niehaus was involved in organising an ANC concert in London, but he told the firm, AL Mostert & Co, that his sister had died and he had to attend the funeral.
The untruth was exposed when Thango, whom Niehaus had insisted be employed as his personal assistant, let slip on their return that they had seen his sister the day before. The article quoted Tony Mostert as saying he had been "dreadfully disappointed in the man's total lack of ethics."
Niehaus seemed to confess to all after the Mail & Guardian confronted him with evidence of the chaotic mismanagement of his financial affairs. When asked about the fraudulent letter he told the newspaper: "I was desperate but what I did was terrible. After I wrote the letter and handed it over I immediately knew that I had done the worst thing in my life. I went to see [then Gauteng MEC for finance Paul] Mashatile. I confessed that I'm deeply compromised and he was deeply disappointed. I resigned immediately."