German Engineering.....Where you need it the most |
Publication | Mail and Guardian |
Date | 2001-04-08 |
Web Link | www.mg.co.za |
A manager at a company that won a R400m slice of the arms deal has revealed how his boss dragged him into the Tony Yengeni luxury car saga, The Sunday Times reports.
Michael Helbing, who was a senior manager at the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS) said that the company's managing director, Michael Woerfel, told him to order a luxury car that was later registered in the name of Yengeni's wife, Lumka, on January 3 this year.
Helbing, who was in charge of industrial participation and special projects at EADS, told the newspaper: "I ordered the car from DaimlerChrysler at the instruction of my boss, Michael Woerfel. I don't question orders from Mr Woerfel. If he tells me to do something I just do it," the newspaper quoted him as saying.
Investigators into the R43bn arms deal are probing the circumstances under which Mrs Yengeni acquired the car and Tony Yengeni, the ANC's Chief Whip, got a state-of-the-art Mercedes 4x4. Asked how the silver Mercedes-Benz C180 ended up in the hands of Lumka Yengeni, Helbing said: "Well, if you put one and one together then my boss probably sold the car to Mrs Yengeni. "I don't know why Mrs Yengeni ordered a car through us instead of going through a dealership." He said EADS got preferential prices for cars bought from DaimlerChrysler.
EADS, a sister company of Mercedes-Benz manufacturer DaimlerChrysler, is a partner in a joint venture that will supply missile and radar technology aboard four corvettes ordered by the government to beef up South Africa's navy.
Tony Yengeni's 4x4 was also originally acquired as a staff vehicle by a senior employee of the arms company, but this person has not yet been identified.
This week staff at EADS said the order for Tony Yengeni's car came from DaimlerChrysler Aerospace (Dasa) in South Africa, which was headed by Woerfel. Dasa was incorporated into EADS in July 1999. Lulama Chakela, a DaimlerChrysler representative, said her company had no record of selling a car to Lumka or Tony Yengeni.
Documents show the Mercedes C180 was ordered by Helbing. The car is identified on computerised motor dealership records as "unit number 810045", a "staff" car.
Yengeni has so far refused to explain why he only made a financial agreement with Debis, DaimlerChrysler's Financial Services, to start paying for his ML320 4x4, worth R359 000, seven months after it was registered in his name.
EADS has a 33% stake in Reutech Radar Systems, a Stellenbosch-based company that secured a R220m contract to provide radars for the four corvettes. EADS is a joint venture between DaimlerChrysler Aerospace, the French company Aerospatiale Matra, which won a R200m plus contract to supply Exocet missiles for the corvettes, and Construcciones Aeronauticas of Spain.
Widespread allegations of corruption have plagued the arms deal. The government has appointed three agencies to investigate. They are headed by the National Director of Public Prosecutions, Bulelani Ngcuka; Auditor-General Shauket Fakie; and Public Protector Selby Baqwa.
The three men called journalists to an extraordinary meeting in Pretoria this week, where they confirmed that an investigation into Yengeni had been under way for some time.
"At this stage it looks like there might be some criminal prosecutions," said Ngcuka. The trio said bank statements from 24 people were being investigated. They hoped their investigation would be completed by July and a report would be handed to Parliament.
Meanwhile, the arms company EADS admitted that it had been involved in getting cars for politicians and would cooperate in the arms probe.
In a fax to the newspaper, the company said it had "rendered assistance to approximately 30 VIPs in the past three years in obtaining vehicles".The sectors concerned were the civil airlines, defence, electronic and related industries, diplomatic and political officials," the statement said.
The admission followed extensive attempts by the newspaper to question managing director Michael Woerfel about his involvement in ordering a car for the wife of the ANC's Chief Whip, Tony Yengeni.
The statement said: "Confirming its full cooperation with and support for the investigation into the South African arms acquisition, EADS is submitting all information at its disposal to the authorities.
"This includes information on assistance rendered by EADS to approximately 30 VIPs in the past three years in obtaining vehicles."
The company, which is linked to the Mercedes-Benz manufacturer, DaimlerChrysler, said the assistance included price discounts and speeding up delivery ahead of waiting lists.
"EADS respects the due legal process currently under way and takes this opportunity to reaffirm its commitment to and ongoing support of the official investigation."
The statement was issued on behalf of EADS South Africa by Peter Mann of Meropa Communications.
With acknowledgement to the Mail and Guardian.