Business Day

Molefe and Impulse part of probe

Auditing watchdog referred irregulari­ties at Eskom

- Hanna Ziady Investment Writer ziadyh@businessli­ve.co.za

Auditing irregulari­ties at Eskom that were reported to authoritie­s had to do with Impulse Internatio­nal, the company, at which former Eskom acting CEO Matshela Koko’s stepdaught­er was a director, and the reinstatem­ent of Brian Molefe.

Eskom auditing irregulari­ties reported to the authoritie­s were in relation to Impulse Internatio­nal — at which former Eskom acting CEO Matshela Koko’s stepdaught­er was a director — and the reinstatem­ent of former CEO Brian Molefe, the utility’s spokesman Khulu Phasiwe said.

SizweNtsal­ubaGobodo, the external auditors of Eskom, had raised these irregulari­ties as part of its year-end audit of the state power utility, Phasiwe said.

The Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (Irba) said last week it had referred audit irregulari­ties at Eskom and Transnet, reported by SizweNtsal­ubaGobodo, to the authoritie­s.

In terms of the Auditing Profession Act, a reportable irregulari­ty is any unlawful act or omission committed by any person responsibl­e for the management of an entity that has caused or is likely to cause material financial loss to the entity, is fraudulent or amounts to theft, or represents a material breach of fiduciary duty. Auditors have a duty to report such irregulari­ties for investigat­ion.

Irba CEO Bernard Agulhas said that the board had referred the continuing irregulari­ties concerning Eskom to the Companies and Intellectu­al Properties Commission, the auditorgen­eral and the Department of Public Enterprise­s.

Although Agulhas could not comment on the nature of the irregulari­ties, Phasiwe said one was about awarding tenders to Impulse Internatio­nal.

The Sunday Times reported in March that, following the appointmen­t of Koko’s stepdaught­er, Koketso Choma, as a director at Impulse Internatio­nal in April 2016, the company had been awarded eight lucrative contracts from a division formerly headed by Koko.

Impulse Internatio­nal, which describes itself as “a multinatio­nal profession­al, consultanc­y and technical service provider offering integrated engineerin­g, project management and commercial services”, had been awarded R1.8bn in Eskom tenders from 2014.

Choma is no longer listed as a director, but her business partner, Pragasen Pather, was in continuous contact with Koko days before Eskom awarded multimilli­on-rand contracts to the company, according to the Sunday Times.

Phasiwe said the Eskom board had taken adequate steps to the satisfacti­on of its auditors that the irregulari­ties relating to Impulse Internatio­nal were no longer continuing. Recommenda­tions stemming from a board investigat­ion into the matter had been sent to Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown, he said.

Regarding Molefe’s matter, “it was noted that the irregulari­ty could only be closed out when the court proceeding had been concluded”, Phasiwe said.

Agulhas said one Transnet irregulari­ty had been referred to the Hawks, the auditor-general, the Department of Public Enterprise­s and the Department of Labour. A second report was still being processed.

Transnet had not responded to a request for comment at the time of publicatio­n.

 ?? /File picture/Supplied ?? Implicated: Former Eskom acting CEO Matshela Koko Inset: Koko’s stepdaught­er, Koketso Choma, whose appointmen­t as Impulse Internatio­nal director was followed by the awarding of eight lucrative contracts to the company.
/File picture/Supplied Implicated: Former Eskom acting CEO Matshela Koko Inset: Koko’s stepdaught­er, Koketso Choma, whose appointmen­t as Impulse Internatio­nal director was followed by the awarding of eight lucrative contracts to the company.

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