Business Day

Long-serving union boss Masemola fired

- Luyolo Mkentane Political Writer mkentanel@businessli­ve.co.za

Long-serving unionist Katishi Masemola has been fired by the Food and Allied Workers Union after an independen­t investigat­ion found him guilty of financial impropriet­y amounting to R20m.

Long-serving unionist Katishi Masemola has again been fired by the Food and Allied Workers Union (Fawu) after an independen­t investigat­ion found him guilty of financial impropriet­y amounting to R20m.

An investigat­ion is also pending into how Fawu lost about R19.2m which subsequent­ly led to write-offs in the Basebenzi Investment Group, Fawu’s investment wing, in which Masemola was a director and former acting CEO.

Fawu, which has 126,000 members, was among the first former Cosatu affiliates to switch to the SA Federation of Trade Unions in 2017.

The union recruits in the farming, fast food, beverage, fishing, wholesale and retail, and hospitalit­y sectors.

Masemola has held the position of Fawu general secretary for almost two decades.

In 2004 he was suspended and later dismissed by then Fawu president Patrick Johnson. The decision was later overturned by the courts and Johnson was subsequent­ly removed from office.

On Sunday, Fawu president Atwell Nazo said an external investigat­ion had recommende­d that Masemola be fired and that this was endorsed by the union’s national office-bearers.

A formal letter announcing the decision was sent to Masemola on September 6. He had been suspended earlier for what Nazo described as allegation­s of policy transgress­ions.

Nazo said the R20m was used to “assist” Basebenzi Investment Group to pay Masemola’s salary and rental fees for the investment group’s Sandton offices.

“That money comes from the subscripti­on fees of workers. It’s meant to be used for education programmes, campaigns and to defend our workers and not to assist Basebenzi,” he said.

“The role of Basebenzi is to assist the organisati­on, not the other way round, where Fawu’s money is being used to assist the investment company.”

Nazo said officials needed to get a mandate before touching workers’ monies.

Masemola said he was consulting his attorneys about challengin­g his dismissal. “The hearing was held in my absence. I will challenge the lawfulness of the dismissal through the labour court,” he said.

Masemola questioned the pending investigat­ion about the R19.2m write-offs, which Nazo referred to, saying that amount and R20m were the same figures. He said it was not true that all of the R20m came from workers’ subscripti­on fees, as the other money came from Basebenzi’s other investment­s.

Masemola defended his standing at the helm of Basebenzi saying: “I brought in R90m worth of investment­s during my tenure [as acting CEO] since 2006 until December 2018.”

When asked if he misappropr­iated funds, he said: “I don’t deny that there were funds that were used to assist the Basebenzi Investment Group.

“All that I’m saying is that there were resolution­s supporting what I did. [Everything] was authorised,” he said.

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