Business Day

Zwane’s role in sale of Optimum to be probed

• MPs to investigat­e part played by former mining minister in deals secured by Guptas

- Linda Ensor Political Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

Parliament’s mineral resources committee is to investigat­e the role of former mineral resources minister Mosebenzi Zwane in the sale of Optimum coal mine and other assets from Glencore to the Guptaowned Tegeta Exploratio­n and Resources.

Parliament’s mineral resources committee is to investigat­e the role of former mineral resources minister Mosebenzi Zwane in the sale of Optimum coal mine and other assets from Glencore to the Gupta-owned Tegeta Exploratio­n and Resources.

Zwane allegedly travelled to Zurich to facilitate the sale of Optimum and will be called to answer questions by MPs during the inquiry.

He has repeatedly failed to appear at committee meetings on invitation to account for his actions and will be called by the committee — if necessary, by subpoena — to answer the questions put to him by the MPs.

The committee met on Wednesday to decide on terms of reference for the inquiry into state capture in the Department of Mineral Resources. This will commence as a matter of urgency at the same time that the inquiry into state capture at Eskom by the public enterprise­s committee winds down. The inquiry will probably start in April and take up to two months.

ANC MP Motswaledi Matlala questioned what purpose the committee’s inquiry would serve as Zwane was no longer a minister, there was a judicial commission of inquiry into state capture and law enforcemen­t agencies were already dealing with state-capture cases.

But committee chairman Luzipo Sahlulele clarified that according to the advice of House of Assembly chairman Cedric Frolick, the committee was required to probe the tenure of the former minister. Frolick will be asked to provide an evidence leader for the inquiry.

DA spokesman on mineral resources James Lorimer insisted that the duty of the committee was to find out what went wrong within the department and to ensure it did not happen again. The inquiry needed to look at the performanc­e of the department and how it acted to the benefit of the Gupta-owned companies to the detriment of other mining companies.

The committee decided that the inquiry would also focus on the alleged noncomplia­nce by the department with the Public Finance Management Act, which resulted in fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e related to travel arrangemen­ts made by the department for Zwane.

It will also probe the alleged breach by Zwane of the Constituti­on and the Executive Members Ethics Act.

The inquiry will investigat­e the handling of mining rehabilita­tion funds by the department. There have been allegation­s that some of the rehabilita­tion funds of Gupta-owned mines have been used for other purposes and that the funds are not at their stipulated level.

Also under the focus of the inquiry will be whether the appointmen­t and dismissal of department­al officials was subject to “external undue influence” — allegedly without sufficient cause. In particular, this relates to the dismissal of the Mpumalanga regional manager — subsequent­ly reinstated after a ruling by the Labour Court — who was dismissed after he issued a compliance notice against Gupta-owned Koornfonte­in mine.

The inquiry partly emerges from the 2016 State of Capture report of former public protector Thuli Madonsela, which contained a number of prima facie findings that pointed to possible governance failures.

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 ?? /Reuters ?? Question time: Former mining minister Mosebenzi Zwane will face yet another parliament­ary probe into state capture, this time by Parliament’s minerals resources committee
/Reuters Question time: Former mining minister Mosebenzi Zwane will face yet another parliament­ary probe into state capture, this time by Parliament’s minerals resources committee

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