Oilgate

{{short description|South African political scandal}}

{{for|the village in Ireland|Oylegate}}

Oilgate is a South African political scandal in which the petrol company Imvume Holdings was accused of paying R11 millions of state money to the ruling African National Congress shortly before the 2004 General Election. The money had been received from the state oil company, PetroSA, as part of an advance payment for a quantity of oil condensate that had been procured from Glencore, an international company.{{cite web |url=http://www.thenewage.co.za/29308-1007-53-New_probe_into_Oilgate |title=New probe into Oilgate | the New Age Online |accessdate=2012-07-11 |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111223221703/http://www.thenewage.co.za/29308-1007-53-New_probe_into_Oilgate |archivedate=2011-12-23 }}

The scandal broke in an article written by the newspaper Mail & Guardian. Imvume was able to get a court order restraining the Mail & Guardian from publishing the article, but was subsequently outmaneuvered when the Freedom Front Plus, an opposition political party, revealed the same information in Parliament. Under South African law, political groups making representations in parliament may not be subjected to legal action for the content of their statements. Since the information was now in the public sphere, the Mail and Guardian was able to print the article.

Over the same period, Imvume Holdings was embroiled in the United Nations (UN) Oil-for-Food scandal. Although Oilgate proper refers to the party funding scandal, it is frequently linked to the Oil-for-Food debacle: the Mail & Guardian alleged that the ANC had been a key player in the Oil-for-Food deals, thus demonstrating that close and possibly inappropriate links existed between Imvume and the ANC.

Background

ANC donation

Imvume Holdings later won another state tender, this time a R750-million contract to supply condensate feedstock to PetroSA, the state-owned oil and gas company. In May 2005, in another scandal, the Mail & Guardian reported that PetroSA had made an irregular payment of R15 million to Imvume, as an advance on the contract. The payment was made in December 2003, four months before the 2004 general election, and, later the same week, Imvume donated R11-million to the ANC. The Mail & Guardian suggested that the transfers were related to Imvume's links to the ANC.{{Cite web|date=2005-05-03|title=The ANC's Oilgate|url=https://mg.co.za/article/2005-05-03-the-ancs-oilgate/|access-date=2022-01-16|website=The Mail & Guardian|language=en-ZA}} In July 2005, the newspaper reported on evidence that Imvume was "effectively a front" for the ANC.{{Cite web|last=Brummer|first=Stefaans|date=2005-07-15|title=Oilgate company was ANC front|url=https://mg.co.za/article/2005-07-15-oilgate-company-was-anc-front/|access-date=2022-01-16|website=The Mail & Guardian|language=en-ZA}}

References