Han som tipsade om Roy Allen inblandning i palme mordet blev antagligen förgiftad:
http://thenewage.co.za/49150-1007-53-Mysterious_death_of_Tai_Minnaar
De Wet Potgieter
General Tai Minnaar died the way he had lived in strange circumstances and people close to him still believe he was assassinated because he knew too much.
Although the former police commissioner Jackie Selebi and his crime intelligence chief, Ray Lala, were officially informed about a sting operation Minnaar and a former scientist of Dr Wouter Basson’s Project Coast under way in Pretoria with American agents involving a shady deal with anthrax, nobody lifted a finger to prevent his body being cremated soon after his death.
A timely autopsy would have shown that Minnaar did not die of natural causes when he collapsed in the arms of his girlfriend, Romay Harding, in September 2002.
The police’s unit for crimes against the state were at the time investigating the sting operation whereby Minnaar was setting up a deal with Muslim extremists linked to al-Qaeda, wanting to buy anthrax developed by the old regime’s biological and chemical programme, Project Coast.
Describing the circumstances of his death, Harding told me that in December 2002 his peculiar discolouration and bloating symptoms prior to his death indicated that he may have been assassinated with some sort of poison.
A kilogram of potassium cyanide was found at Minnaar’s home after his death.
Minnaar, who was kicked out of the SADF when the South African government accused him of complicity in the Ciskei coup, had spent six months in the Pretoria Central prison after the coup.
In his strange and shady lifetime Minnaar was trained by the old Bureau of State Security as a spy and was an accomplished parabat soldier who worked undercover during the 1980s in what appeared to have been a joint operation between the CIA and South African military intelligence in Cuba.
He was also part of a team of former spies who claimed to have documented proof that the apartheid regime was behind the assassination of the Swedish prime minister, Olof Palme, in 1986.