Business Day

Motsoeneng had no matric ‘but was good with people’

- Amil Umraw

Hlaudi Motsoeneng was a “troublesho­oter” who had the skills the SABC needed for its COO, even though he did not have the requisite qualificat­ions.

That was how the public broadcaste­r’s former board chair, Ben Ngubane, accounted for Motsoeneng’s meteoric rise at the broadcaste­r.

Ngubane was testifying at the state capture inquiry on Monday when he admitted that the SABC board knew Motsoeneng did not have a matric certificat­e. However, it did not pay attention to his qualificat­ions because he was the man needed for the COO job, which came with a more than R2m annual package.

Motsoeneng was sacked in June 2017 after he was found guilty of bringing the SABC into disrepute during a controvers­ial media conference. During that briefing, Motsoeneng defended his 90% local-music content quota‚ criticised a parliament­ary ad hoc committee probe that looked into problems at the SABC‚ and insulted an interim board member at the time.

Motsoeneng’s controvers­ial policies, particular­ly the 90% local-music quota, are said to have contribute­d to the financial mess at the SABC.

Motsoeneng shot up the ranks at the broadcaste­r, from being a producer at Lesedi FM in the Free State to being the SABC’s COO within a year.

Ngubane told the commission that Motsoeneng kept Lesedi FM profitable while other stations were turning losses.

“He was very proactive with all the issues that came up,” Ngubane said.

Motsoeneng “was assigned to be the board’s communicat­ions and stakeholde­r relations manager on behalf of the board, and that is how he got to ultimately become an acting COO”, Ngubane said.

He said Motsoeneng had people skills, “and that’s what we needed at that time”.

“This happened when we had difficulty with communicat­ions. The board decided we needed a person who would do board communicat­ions. Board decisions were not being reported correctly to staff.”

Motsoeneng was then handed the role of acting group executive for stakeholde­r relations.

In a report by former public protector Thuli Madonsela, Motsoeneng was found to have received salary appraisals thrice in a single year, hiking his annual salary as executive manager for stakeholde­r relations from R1.5m to R2.4m.

When he was appointed acting COO, his monthly salary rose from R122,961 to R211,172 in 12 months in a violation of the SABC personnel regulation­s.

“Human resources identified [Motsoeneng’s] position in that context of adjusting salaries, of creating parity. When he became group executive there was another adjustment and when he became acting COO there was another adjustment,” Ngubane said.

Ngubane said nobody paid much attention to his qualificat­ions because he was already employed in the SABC.

“Unfortunat­ely, qualificat­ions don’t come in for that type of decision. It’s a question of track record and the level in the organisati­on. That’s how acting people are appointed. He succeeded as a stakeholde­r manager; there was a new challenge and he was thought to be able to do it,” Ngubane said.

MOTSOENENG HAD PEOPLE SKILLS, AND THAT’S WHAT WE NEEDED AT THAT TIME. THIS HAPPENED WHEN WE HAD DIFFICULTY WITH COMMUNICAT­IONS

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