In the past week, a spate of reports, including from the BBC and the 
University of Bath, has detailed how British American Tobacco (BAT) ran a
 spy ring in SA.Of course, none of this is new – we’ve been 
writing about it for aeons now. But because so much time has lapsed 
since this story initially broke in SA, perhaps a recap is in order.
Years
 ago, BAT took off the gloves in a bid to claw back market share from 
competitors who emerged selling the same product, but cheaper. 
BAT’S strategy was simple: disrupt its competitors to the point of making it impossible for them to operate. 
To
 do this, BAT relied on a security firm — Forensic Security Services 
(FSS) — to co-ordinate activities, under the guiding hand of British 
American Tobacco SA’s (BAT SA’s) anti-illicit trade head. But it also 
used a series of in-place “agents” at its competitors’ businesses even 
as it co-opted law enforcement agencies and deployed a shared agent with
 the State Security Agency (SSA): triple agent and honey trap Belinda 
Walter.
All of this was monitored from BAT’s global headquarters, Globe House in London.
One
 former employee explained it as follows: “Our primary work description 
was to spy on competitors and disrupt business operations on behalf of 
BAT SA, [which] was fully aware that FSS was obtaining information 
illegally, and these (sic) included obtaining recorded conversations.”  more