Shaik was also a key political ally of Zuma, who was elected President in 2009 and appointed Shaik to lead the South African Secret Service in October 2009. He left the position in February 2012 due to his poor relationship with Siyabonga Cwele, Zuma's Minister of State Security.
In the 1980s, Shaik practiced optometry in Durban while working secretly for the anti-apartheid African National Congress (ANC).[6] His brother Yunus recruited him into the ANC in the early 1980s, inducting him into an underground intelligence cell that reported to the ANC's southern command in Swaziland.[1]Jacob Zuma was Shaik's direct superior in the chain of command of the ANC's armed wing, Umkhonto weSizwe (MK).[7][8]
Some time in 1986 after his release, Shaik was visited at his optometry practice by a Security Branch officer who had met the Shaik brothers in jail and who offered to provide the ANC with access to confidential Security Branch files. In subsequent years, Shaik became the handler of the Security Branch double agent, who was nicknamed Nightingale, in an MK operation codenamed Operation Bible.[3][9] Operation Bible was later incorporated into Operation Vula and while running it Shaik was sent by the ANC to receive intelligence training in East Germany.[1] When the Security Branch uncovered Operation Vula in 1990, Shaik went underground and remained in hiding until South African President F. W. de Klerk indemnified all Vula operatives in 1991.[9]
Shaik was widely identified as a personal friend, close associate, and political supporter of his former MK comrade Jacob Zuma during and after the latter's tenure as Deputy President of South Africa from 1999 to 2005.[4][14][15] In 2003, after Bulelani Ngcuka of the National Prosecuting Authority revealed publicly that Zuma had been investigated for corruption, Shaik and Mac Maharaj, another Zuma ally, told the press that Ngcuka had probably been an apartheid spy. The basis for the claim was an Operation Bible file opened on Ngcuka in the late 1980s.[16] The claim was found untrue by a specially appointed commission of inquiry, the Hefer Commission, and in 2020 Shaik said that he regretted having made the allegation.[3]
In 2004–2005, Shaik's brother, Schabir, was prosecuted for fraud and corruption in relation to improper payments made by Schabir to Zuma in connection with the 1999 Arms Deal. During the trial, Shaik acted as a spokesman for his family and strongly defended Schabir in the press.[4] He also served as chief executive of CorpAfrica,[5] which managed the affairs of Schabir's company, Nkobi Group, during his trial.[17]
It was also reported that Shaik had played a key role as an adviser to Zuma during Zuma's successful campaign to be elected as ANC President at the party's 52nd National Conference in December 2007.[14] According to the Sunday Times, between 2005 and 2007 Shaik "built a formidable network" of volunteers and donors to underwrite Zuma's presidential campaign.[18] It was also rumoured that Shaik and an associate, Cyril Beeka, co-owned the Elexions Agency, the company which administered the election at the conference; Shaik strongly denied the rumours.[19]
In August 2012, the Development Bank of Southern Africa announced that Shaik had been appointed as chief executive of its new subsidiary, Development Bank International.[5] The Sunday Times reported that his appointment had been facilitated by Pravin Gordhan, who was the Minister of Finance and oversaw the bank, on behalf of Zuma's presidential office.[28]
After the end of Zuma's term as president in 2018, Shaik spoke publicly about his relationship with Zuma, including in testimony to the Zondo Commission,[31] and was critical of Zuma's conduct while in office.[32]
Since 2022 he has been High Commissioner to Canada. [33]