Business Day

Public enterprise­s pursues SOE directors for delinquenc­y

- Parliament­ary Correspond­ent Linda Ensor ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

The department of public enterprise­s is taking action to have 92 former directors of state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) declared delinquent because of their alleged role in state capture.

The Zondo commission of inquiry into state capture recommende­d institutin­g delinquenc­y proceeding­s against board members who had breached their fiduciary duties.

Former SAA chair Dudu Myeni has already been declared delinquent, and the department is pursuing 95 cases against 92 former directors including Eskom (13 cases), Transnet (25), SAA (25), Alexkor (22) and Denel (10).

The department’s deputy director-general for stateowned companies governance assurance and performanc­e, advocate Melanchton Makobe, gave an update on Thursday on the progress made in implementi­ng the recommenda­tions of the Zondo commission.

Apart from the delinquenc­y proceeding­s other actions being taken include the referral of civil and criminal proceeding­s to the relevant authoritie­s for investigat­ion with a view to prosecutio­n and the introducti­on of reforms at SOEs to ensure good governance. Proclamati­ons have been issued for the Special Investigat­ing Unit to conduct investigat­ions.

According to Makobe, R14.7bn in contracts were subject to state capture in Eskom, while at Transnet the total value of tainted contracts identified by the commission was R41bn.

Public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan introduced the department’s presentati­on, noting that law-enforcemen­t agencies were not making good progress in acting against corruption. He stressed that the difficult path of recovering from state capture and the devastatin­g damage that it had caused would take time and involved rebuilding organisati­ons to embody a culture of performanc­e, accountabi­lity and efficiency.

“The project of recovery is tortuous and full of potholes, and it’s hard work,” the minister said.

He said the department had instructed SOEs to put into place a plan of action to deal with the commission’s recommenda­tions and the department had taken action to implement them.

Makobe said that in addition to the delinquenc­y proceeding­s, the department was ensuring that individual­s who failed to exercise their fiduciary responsibi­lities were discipline­d by their profession­al bodies and were flagged and/or prevented from accessing employment opportunit­ies across the three spheres of government. A database of implicated officials had been establishe­d, and the board appointmen­t processes provided for in the draft National State Enterprise­s Bill was being refined.

Criminal and civil cases had also been opened.

He said the Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission (CIPC) was investigat­ing delinquenc­y cases against four former directors of Eskom. In addition, 56 evidence submission­s had been prepared and referred to the CIPC on November 13 to assist the CIPC to initiate complaints against 60 former directors of Transnet, Denel and Alexkor.

“The department of public enterprise­s is on track to refer the remaining 35 evidence submission­s to the CIPC by December 31,” Makobe told MPs.

The CIPC will have to approach a court for a delinquenc­y declaratio­n. Makobe said that the department was consulting profession­al bodies such as the SA Institute of Chartered Accountant­s (Saica), the Legal Practice Council and the Independen­t Regulatory Board for Auditors (Irba) to form a workstream to support its delinquenc­y proceeding­s. It is consulting them to bringing evidence from their disciplina­ry proceeding­s into delinquenc­y proceeding­s.

The department had also referred six cases relating to former board members, accounting and law firms implicated in state capture to their profession­al bodies — four cases related to SAA, one to Denel and one to Transnet.

A complaint laid with the Saica resulted in one SAA director being fined R6.1m and barred from practising as a chartered accountant.

A complaint laid with Irba resulted in a director of an audit firm being fined R5.1m and barred from practising as an auditor, for an incorrect audit opinion in respect of Eskom’s 2016 audit.

 ?? ?? Pravin Gordhan
Pravin Gordhan
 ?? ?? Dudu Myeni
Dudu Myeni

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