Sunday, September 25, 2016

British American Tobacco 'bribed' police - affidavit

Latest: Corruption and Money Laundering.

British American Tobacco 'bribed' police - affidavit.



Johannesburg - JSE-listed conglomerate British American Tobacco (BAT) and the private security firm it has contracted have been accused of running a scheme of bribing South African police officers, spying on competitors using police cameras, and even sourcing confidential business information on one of its rivals from officials in the SA Revenue Service (Sars).
The latest explosive allegations against BAT are contained in a sworn affidavit made by a former employee of Forensic Security Services (FSS), a private security outfit run by former apartheid era intelligence agent Stephen Botha.
According to the affidavit, a copy of which has been leaked online along with scores of other documents that purport to prove BAT's unlawful spying on local competitors, BAT pays FSS about R150m a year, ostensibly to help fight the illegal cigarette trade in South Africa.
However, if the former FSS employee is to be believed, FSS, with the full blessing of senior BAT executives, had instead been running a massive unlawful spying and disruption programme aimed at ensuring it kept hold of the lion's share of South Africa's multi billion rand tobacco market.
Court application

No comments:

Post a Comment