- Brett Kebble
Roger Brett Kebble (
February 19 ,1964 -September 27 ,2005 ) was aSouth Africa n mining magnate with close links to factions in the ruling political party, theAfrican National Congress . He was shot to death in 2005 by unknown assailants.Brett was born in the mining town of Springs, on the
East Rand .He matriculated from
St. Andrew's School, Bloemfontein , in 1981, and then went on to theUniversity of Cape Town , from where he graduated in 1986.His first job was as an
articled clerk for Mallinicks Cape Town, in the late 1980s.He was involved in the sale by Anglo American of its JCI gold assets to
Mzi Khumalo in 1995, but the partnership ended soon after.In August 2005 he was deposed from the companies he ran,
Western Areas , JCI andRandgold & Exploitation , following moves by concerned investors and stakeholders. There is an investigation to determine the whereabouts of some R2-billion-worth ofRandgold Resources shares, which Randgold & Exploration could not easily account for and which had either been loaned out or sold. [ [http://www.fin24.co.za/articles/default/display_article.asp?Nav=ns&ArticleID=1518-24_1888991 New revelations on Kebble money] ] [ [http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=265349 Kebble's 'missing' money] ] [ [http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=266272 Ancyl link to Kebble fraud] ]In public and private, Kebble lived a flamboyant life Fact|date=February 2007. He had strong business and political connections with ousted Deputy President
Jacob Zuma Fact|date=February 2007 and theANC Youth League Fact|date=February 2007, and was viewed by some Who|date=July 2007 as ablack-economic empowerment visionary.He married Ingrid in December 1990 and they had four children.
Death
He was shot dead near a bridge over the M1 in Melrose
Johannesburg at around 9pm on27 September 2005 while driving to a dinner engagement. An autopsy performed three days after the murder found that the bullets were a rare, 'low velocity' type used by bodyguards and crack security operatives. The purpose of such bullets, which requires a specially adapted pistol, was to hit assassins and terrorists without passing through their bodies and hitting bystanders or hostages. Despite the closer range, the gunpowder burns in general were not severe, providing further evidence that the ammunition was of a special "reduced charge". [http://www.news24.com/News24/South_Africa/News/0,,2-7-1442_1829589,00.html] . As of September, 2006, the murder is still unsolved. Legal action is now ongoing to resolve the issue of the missing Randgold and Exploration shares. As of April 2007, a tentative agreement had been reached providing for the merging of Ranggold and Exploration and JCI, the company to which Kebble transferred most ot the proceeds of the R&E shares.On 16 November 2006 businessman
Glenn Agliotti was arrested in connection with the murder of Brett Kebble. Agliotti is a close personal friend of South African Police CommissionerJackie Selebi . Agliotti is alleged to have strong links with organised crime and racketeering. [http://www.suntimes.co.za/SpecialReports/Kebble/Default.aspx?ID=135056] .The Brett Kebble Art Awards
Kebble was the controversial patron of the Brett Kebble Art Awards which he established in 2003 to provide a showcase for established artists and help those less known attain recognition as well as build a non-racial bridge into the 21st century.
The Kebble as it became known, was the most inclusive award of its kind (often criticized for including a “craft” category to be judged on par with the other mediums like painting, sculpture, printmaking and photography) in South Africa. Adding to this, it was also the richest, having a total purse of R620 000 (roughly $98 000) with a grand prize of R200 000 (roughly $32 000).
After Kebble’s murder, his family decided to cancel the 2006 awards.
In February 2006, artist
Deborah Weber opened with a solo exhibition inJohannesburg called The Kebble on the same day that the BKAA were to open at theCape Town International Convention Centre . She explored the time trajectory from being selected as an artist for the 2004 Kebble Art Awards, to working on the awards in 2005 ending with Brett Kebble’s death in September 2005.References
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