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When Hogan Lovells was tasked by Sars in 2016 with investigating the conduct of former chief officer for business and individual taxes Jonas Makwakwa — accused of stealing over R1.7-million from state reserves — the firm returned a report which Sars commissioner Tom Moyane used to clear his No 2 of misconduct, returning him to his top job.
On Wednesday 25 January 2023, six years later, Hogan Lovells issued a statement declaring that it now realised it had “found its name connected to State Capture as a result of work that former partners performed for Sars”.
The apology is a moral victory for Lord Peter Hain who has relentlessly spearheaded a campaign from the UK House of Lords for multinationals who were drawn into State Capture to be held accountable.
Read in Daily Maverick: “State Capture: Lord Hain refuses meeting with Hogan Lovells until firm admits wrongdoing and apologises”
“Hogan Lovells and Lord Hain agree that business in South Africa must fully acknowledge its role in State Capture and the part business must play to ensure that this is never repeated,” read the Hogan Lovells statement.
Big fish off the hook
It was Hogan Lovells South African Chair, Lavery Modise, who, on behalf of Hogan Lovells, had conducted the investigation into Makwakwa and his romantic partner Kelly-Anne Elksie.
Later Modise was to tell Parliament’s standing committee on finance that he had not been mandated to investigate “criminal aspects of the financial transactions”.
Modise said he had left it to the Directorate For Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI) to probe Moyane and Makwakwa who have both escaped prosecution.
Meanwhile, Makwakwa has made headlines in Botswana after the appointment of his company, Africa Tax Academy, in February 2022 on a contract worth P7-million (R12-million) to consult with Botswana Revenue Service’s Department of Large Tax Audit.
According to the Botswana Gazette, the Directorate on Corruption and Economic Crimes (DCEC) and the Directorate of Intelligence and Security Service in that country have begun to probe into the circumstances of Makwakwa’s appointment.
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Botswana Unified Revenue Service (Burs) spokesperson Mable Bolele, said the service was unaware of any investigations into the contract at this point.
Makwakwa is the director of Africa Tax Academy which issued a statement to the Gazette that “Mr Makwakwa has also said that he has no knowledge of any investigations into him or his company and confirmed that he forms part of the Commissioner General’s advisory team
“Our Managing Director was investigated while still at Sars and was cleared of any wrongdoing,” by Hogan Lovells back in 2017.
In April 2022, Oabile Regoeng, MP for Molepolole North, asked Botswana Minister of Finance, Peggy Serame, to explain Makwakwa’s appointment considering the controversy that surrounds him.
Serame had responded that Makwakwa had never been charged in South Africa “and considering his experience was the right man for the job”.
The scene of the crime
Jonas Makwakwa is a chartered accountant who spent 19 years working his way up the hierarchy at Sars.
In May 2016, when the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) flagged suspicious payments Makwakwa and Elskie had made into their personal accounts, he was Sars Chief Officer for Business and Individual Tax.
The FIC had compiled a report of the transactions and how these might have contravened the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act (Precca), the Financial Intelligence Centre Act and the Prevention of Organised Crime Act which were handed to Sars Commissioner Tom Moyane.
Instead of calling in the Hawks, he called in Hogan Lovells.
Hain later reminded the legal firm that it had “issued an incomplete, fatally flawed whitewash of a report, which ultimately cleared Makwakwa, despite reams of evidence to the contrary”.
We’re so sorry
On Wednesday the legal firm said in its statement “We have changed our structure and our processes and given our experience, we are even more careful about the work we do for our clients and how our name may be used in that context. We deplore and oppose all aspects of corruption and we champion integrity in business and in government”.
The firm said that it had committed its expertise and resources “to raise awareness and to take action against the crippling effects of corruption and State Capture in South Africa and we will be supporting anti-corruption initiatives to achieve this outcome”.
Lord Hain said he welcomed Hogan Lovells’ commitment “to ethical business and tackling corruption wherever it is to be found”. DM
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