Bongani Bongo was accused of attempting to bribe Ntuthuzelo Vanara, the evidence leader in Parliament’s inquiry into state capture at
Eskom. In an affidavit to Speaker
Baleka Mbete, Vanara claimed that Bongo approached him on behalf of acting Eskom board chairperson Zethembe Khoza and offered what Vanara described as “a blank cheque” to halt the committee’s investigation. Mbete referred the matter to Parliament’s joint ethics committee for further scrutiny. Following these allegations, Bongo was arrested in
Cape Town on 21 November 2019 and charged with corruption. However, on 26 February 2021, Judge
John Hlophe of the Western Cape High Court dismissed the case after Bongo’s legal team successfully argued a section 174 application. This provision of South African law allows for charges to be withdrawn if a court determines that the state has not presented sufficient evidence to reasonably secure a conviction. The ruling effectively cleared Bongo of any wrongdoing in the matter. Bongo was also implicated in a separate
Hawks investigation into alleged irregular land transactions during his tenure as a legal adviser in the
Mpumalanga human settlements department. He, along with several government officials, a lawyer, and businessmen, was arrested in
Nelspruit and initially faced over 60 counts of fraud and corruption. Among those implicated were senior government official
David Dube and Bongo’s younger brother,
Joel Bongo, who was accused of receiving two luxury vehicles from businessmen involved in government land deals. Despite the initial number of charges, Bongo ultimately faced only three counts of fraud and corruption. In June 2023, at the start of the trial, the state dropped two of these charges due to a lack of evidence linking him to the alleged offenses. On the same day, all charges against his brother Joel were also withdrawn. In May 2024, Bongo and four co-accused were fully acquitted of all remaining charges. In 2025, Bongo lodged a R38.2 million civil claim against the state, citing wrongful arrest, emotional trauma, reputational harm and loss of income. The lawsuit relates to his 2019 arrest in the bribery case, which was initially dismissed in 2021 but has since been reinstated in February 2025 and which Bongo described as a political witch hunt aimed at further tarnishing his name. ==References==