President Robert Mugabe called for the lifting of "illegally imposed sanctions" on his
regime.
Pikoli hacker claim probed
Article By:
Sun, 04 May 2008 08:57
The Ginwala commission set up to inquire into the suspension of
National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) head Vusi Pikoli said on Saturday
it was aware that Pikoli is allegedly being blackmailed by a hacker.
Commission spokesperson Lawson Naidoo said the commission had been
notified by Pikoli's lawyers.
"The matter is being dealt with."
Naidoo said he could not comment on whether the alleged hacking
would affect proceedings of the commission.
The commission is meant to begin proceedings on Wednesday.
On Friday, Pikoli's attorneys said an individual was claiming to
have hacked Pikoli's system.
"The hacker is threatening to release Mr Pikoli's documents to the
press, if he is not paid," Aslam Moosajee of Deneys Reitz said in a
terse statement.
Pikoli would not give in to attempts to extort money from him, he
said.
Moosajee warned the media against facilitating "the commission of a
crime by engaging with the hacker or
any information that he/she
offers".
Last week, the presidency reportedly launched an 11th-hour bid to
prevent embarrassing confidential information behind Pikoli's
suspension from being made public.
The Sunday Independent reported sources told the newspaper that
hours before Pikoli was to release documents detailing what he told
President Thabo Mbeki and others about suspended police chief Jackie
Selebi's alleged corruption, he received a settlement offer from
government.
The offer, which presidency spokesperson Mukoni Ratshitanga was unable
to confirm or comment upon, proposed that Mbeki might consider lifting
Pikoli's suspension in exchange for his agreement to resign.
A source told the Sunday Independent it was highly unlikely that
Pikoli - who says he was suspended because of his and the Scorpions'
refusal to end their probe into Selebi' affairs - would accept the
"bizarre" proposal.
In a statement last Friday, Deneys Reitz
confirmed that Pikoli would
not "at this stage" make public his submissions to the Ginwala
Commission.
"Mr Pikoli remains committed to doing so at the appropriate time,"
the statement said.
This was "as a courtesy to government and to allow it to make
appropriate representations to Dr Ginwala about in-camera hearings".
Government's attorneys contend that making Pikoli's submission
public would jeopardise a ruling on in-camera hearings. It had
indicated its intention to apply for certain parts of its submission to
be held in-camera.
Mbeki suspended Pikoli on 24 September last year and former speaker
of the National Assembly Frene Ginwala, was subsequently appointed on
28 September to head the inquiry.
At the time, Mbeki cited a breakdown of the relationship between
Pikoli and Justice Minister Brigitte Mabandla as the reason for the NPA
head's suspension.
The commission's terms of reference cover two broad areas -Pikoli's
fitness to hold office and the working relationship between Pikoli and
Mabandla.