Business Day

KPMG-Gupta probe starts soon

• Ntsebeza gears up to probe ‘rogue unit’ report and Gupta-related work

- Genevieve Quintal Political Writer quintalg@businessli­ve.co.za

The South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s inquiry into KPMG and the work it did for the controvers­ial Gupta family is expected to start hearing testimony later in January.

The South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s (Saica) inquiry into KPMG and the work it did for the Gupta family is expected to start hearing testimony later in January.

Also covered by the probe is the report on the South African Revenue Service’s (SARS’s) socalled rogue unit.

The “independen­t” inquiry, led by advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza, is looking into the institute’s members employed by KPMG and whose conduct allegedly contravene­d the Saica Code of Profession­al Conduct.

A second probe into KPMG’s conduct is being carried out by the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (Irba). The two investigat­ions are separate.

KPMG has been at the centre of state-capture allegation­s. The fallout over its work for the Guptas and its SARS report led to the loss of a number of its clients and the departure of nine senior executives including former CEO Trevor Hoole.

Other clients are waiting for the outcome of the investigat­ions before making a decision on whether to keep working with the firm.

There was confusion in 2017 over whether the Saica inquiry would be the independen­t inquiry announced in September by the firm. However, after the terms of reference were released, KPMG SA said it was “considerin­g if additional steps need to be taken”. Spokesman Nqubeko Sibiya on Sunday said the firm welcomed the confirmati­on by Saica CEO Terence Nombembe on December 5 that the Ntsebeza inquiry would “provide the reassuranc­e” the company called for.

“We are engaging with this independen­t inquiry as part of our commitment to rebuilding public trust and look forward to the publicatio­n of the inquiry's findings once its work is complete,” he said.

Sibiya said KPMG SA was co-operating with both inquiries by responding to informatio­n requests from relevant bodies.

The Ntsebeza inquiry has been divided into four phases.

MMMG Attorneys, the secretaria­t for the inquiry, said it was in the second phase of reviewing submission­s, which close on January 19.

The inquiry panel is due to meet on Monday to finalise the scheduling and decide on a programme for the hearings and sequencing of witnesses.

In phase three, witnesses would be invited to appear before the inquiry to present their evidence. Phase three was set to start on January 22 and end on February 28, the secretaria­t said. “The scheduling as announced in our media statement of November 2 2017 is still on track,” it said.

“The inquiry made an open call for submission­s and has received substantia­l submission­s from interested parties who responded to the inquiry’s call for submission­s.”

On Friday, Irba said one of the lines of its investigat­ion was nearly complete and would be tabled at the upcoming investigat­ing committee.

It said it was conducting “a multifacet­ed investigat­ion”, which had extended beyond the initial investigat­ion into the audits of Linkway Trading, which was allegedly used to channel R30m of taxpayers’ money to fund the infamous 2013 Sun City Gupta wedding.

 ?? /Russell Roberts ?? Ready for action: Advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza will lead the South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s’s inquiry into KPMG and the work it did for the Gupta family. A separate inquiry will be done by the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors.
/Russell Roberts Ready for action: Advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza will lead the South African Institute of Chartered Accountant­s’s inquiry into KPMG and the work it did for the Gupta family. A separate inquiry will be done by the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors.

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