Man Alone (October 2024, Trade Paperback, approx 300 pg) Caryn Dolley

Mandela’s top cop – exposing South Africa’s ceaseless sabotage.

André Lincoln’s journey from anti-apartheid intelligence operative to a key figure in South Africa’s police force reveals the intricate ties between law enforcement and organized crime. His experiences highlight how the structures established during apartheid laid the groundwork for enduring collusion between police and gangsters, leading to significant implications in both the criminal underworld and political landscape. Lincoln’s story serves as a lens through which to understand the broader dynamics of violence and power struggles in post-apartheid South Africa.

In the mid-1990s, Nelson Mandela appointed Lincoln to lead a secret unit investigating the connections between the government and criminal organizations. However, in 1997, the unit was embroiled in controversy when accusations surfaced that Lincoln was involved in rogue activities and colluded with the Italian Mafia. Lincoln maintained that he was framed by former apartheid-era officers looking to divert attention from their own illicit activities, which persisted even after the transition to democracy.

Journalist Caryn Dolley provides an in-depth exploration of Lincoln’s tumultuous career, documenting his initial conviction and subsequent vindication in a high-profile case that implicated numerous senior politicians and police officials. Through exclusive access to Lincoln and extensive research, Dolley reveals the shocking scandals that have plagued the South African Police Service, shedding light on the complexities of undercover operations and the ongoing ramifications of corruption in a newly democratic society.

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Caryn Dolley

R310.00

Available on back-order

Description

INSIDE THE BATTLES TO FIGHT POLICE CORRUPTION.

This is the thrilling story of how a one-time anti-apartheid intelligence operative became one of South Africa’s most important police figures, heading units under immense fire from all sides. It is the story of how apartheid-era policing structures lay the foundations for cop-gangster collusion and how these have endured into democracy.

André Lincoln’s life exposes the dirty ploys that have swung South Africa’s trajectory; how street-level killings could be flashpoints of deep state proxy wars; and raises suspicions about who in Nelson Mandela’s realm backstabbed whom. His career represents local and global criminal investigations that span decades and involve nefarious individuals, from an informant once close to Colombia’s Pablo Escobar, to several suspected Cape Town crime kingpins. In the mid-1990s, Mandela hand-picked Lincoln to head a secret unit that would explore the nexus between government and gangsters. But the unit ruptured because of accusations in 1997 that Lincoln was running a rogue operation and colluding with the Italian Mafia. Lincoln countered that apartheid-era cops framed him to cover up their involvement in crimes, pre- and post-democracy. He was first convicted but later vindicated in a case that dislodged the names of some of South Africa’s highest-ranking politicians and senior government agents.

With exclusive access to Lincoln, journalist Caryn Dolley uncovers the electrifying dynamics of undercover work – first against the state, then for it; she delves into court cases and through years of reporting and research exposes, for the first time and in full, the sordid scandal – with Lincoln at its centre – that has lacerated the South African Police Service and implicated some of the country’s top cops and politicians.