Business Day

Gordhan’s appeal bid struck down on ruling over Mango sale decision

- Carin Smith

The high court in Pretoria on Wednesday dismissed an applicatio­n by public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan for leave to appeal against a judgment forcing him to make a decision about the sale of lowcost airline Mango, according to a judgment seen by Business Day.

Mango, a subsidiary of stateowned SA Airways (SAA), is in business rescue.

The high court had issued an order declaring the minister’s failure to make a decision regarding an applicatio­n in terms of the Public Finance Management Act for the proposed sale submitted to him in November last year is unlawful and constituti­onally invalid. Gordhan had 30 days to make a decision and provide reasons for it, failing which it could be presumed the applicatio­n was approved.

The minister instead applied for leave to appeal against the judgment, effectivel­y putting implementa­tion of the court order on hold. Gordhan and his department’s applicatio­n for leave to appeal was opposed by Mango, its business rescue practition­er Sipho Sono and the trade union Numsa. The applicatio­n for leave to appeal was dismissed with costs.

A decision by Gordhan is needed to determine whether the sale of Mango to a preferred bidder selected by the business rescue practition­er in terms of the accepted rescue plan can go ahead.

If the attempt to sell Mango fails, Sono is likely to have to wind down the airline. In that case, employees and post-commenceme­nt creditors will get 100c in the rand and pre-commenceme­nt concurrent creditors only 4.43c in the rand.

STALLING TACTIC

Sono has claimed in the past that Gordhan wanted to see the business case of the selected investor before making a decision. Sono is therefore concerned about sharing such informatio­n as Mango is likely to compete with its parent company, SAA.

Gordhan and the department said in their applicatio­n for leave to appeal against the high court ruling that he wants to ensure

APPLICATIO­N FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL WAS OPPOSED BY MANGO, ITS BUSINESS RESCUE PRACTITION­ER AND NUMSA

that all aspects of Mango’s business rescue process “are transparen­t, legally sound and in the best interest of the SA public”. He denied that it is a stalling tactic or an attempt to undermine the need to complete Mango’s business rescue process.

The department said Gordhan is still awaiting informatio­n from Sono to enable him to make the decision on the Public Finance Management Act applicatio­n. It includes a detailed business plan to assess the viability of the consortium selected by the business rescue practition­er to buy Mango, comprehens­ive due diligence, and foreign ownership details to comply with laws.

Sono contends in past court documents he has already made it clear that no further informatio­n will be forthcomin­g from him apart from what has already been provided to the department and the minister.

Sono was hoping that Mango could restart operations in December 2021 — to benefit from the peak summer holiday season at the time. However, Gordhan stipulated an investor had to be found to get Mango off the ground again. He would not allow the R819m allocated to Mango from government funding for SAA’s own business rescue to be used to get the airline to fly again.

In the case of SAA’s own strategic equity partnershi­p with the Takatso Consortium that is still being finalised, Gordhan told parliament that it fell outside the scope of the act. Takatso will obtain a 51% stake in SAA.

 ?? ?? Pravin Gordhan
Pravin Gordhan

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