Business Day

SABC to get initial R2.1bn of state bailout

- Ntando Thukwana thukwanan@sundaytime­s.co.za

State broadcaste­r the SABC will on Monday receive the first tranche of the bailout granted by the Treasury, helping it escape some of its financial distress. Communicat­ions and digital technology minister Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams said on Friday the SABC would get the initial R2.1bn of its R3.2bn cash injection. It would only receive the remaining R1.1bn once it has fully met three more preconditi­ons set by the Treasury.

State broadcaste­r the SABC will on Monday receive the first tranche of the bailout granted by the Treasury, helping it escape some of its financial distress.

Communicat­ions and digital technology minister Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams said on Friday the SABC would get the initial R2.1bn of its R3.2bn cash injection. It would only receive the remaining R1.1bn once it has fully met three more preconditi­ons set by the Treasury.

“The department of communicat­ions has assisted SABC to obtain the requisite funding allocation through submitting required motivation­s to National Treasury and enlisting the services of the government technical advisory centre to help bolster its turnaround plan,” Ndabeni-Abrahams said.

Some of the Treasury conditions met by the SABC include a probe into the cause of its financial collapse and why prior turnaround plans failed, as well as a determinat­ion of the parastatal’s cash requiremen­ts for the next 12-18 months.

The debt-laden broadcaste­r requested funds of about R6.8bn from the government in February. Just more than half of their request will be enough to keep it solvent, Media Monitoring Africa director William Bird said.

In the 2018/2019 financial year, the public broadcaste­r reported a net loss of R482.4m and said it continued to battle liquidity constraint­s.

“It’s a really positive step. I worry that people are going to assume that this means everything is OK, and in fact it just means that the SABC is still in deep financial trouble,” Bird said.

“Instead of having to focus on just surviving, they can now focus on trying to bring it down to the changes that they know they need to make,” he said.

Ongama Mtimka, a political analyst and lecturer at Nelson Mandela University, said it is important for the state to support the SABC though SA’s fiscus is not well placed to issue bailouts of this nature.

“While the state should continue to support the public broadcaste­r, and continuous­ly so, my only fear is that the relationsh­ips between the state and the SABC are not made to be that of a mouthpiece, and compromise editorial independen­ce.

“From a broader national interest point of view, it is important to continue to support the SABC,” Mtimka said.

Finance minister Tito Mboweni has previously said restructur­ing officers will be deployed to state-owned enterprise­s to ensure they are brought back to stability.

As part of the conditions attached to the bailout, the SABC is to appoint a chief reorganisa­tion officer, which will be agreed on by the finance minister.

Mtimka said the SABC not only needs a financial turnaround but a restructur­ing of management as well.

“I hope that the governing party can approach the SABC with good faith, which results in them committing to having competent and independen­t nonexecuti­ves at board level, and executive directors at a dayto-day company level which can really drive the SABC to succeed,” he said.

“Government should continue to ensure the SABC doesn’t forsake its public mandate due to balance sheet pressures.”

Bird said the public broadcaste­r needs to revisit its vision and assess its sustainabi­lity in an emerging digital environmen­t as its spend on new infrastruc­ture and digital upgrades increases.

 ??  ?? Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams
Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams
 ??  ?? Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams
Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams

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