Business Day

About time for SAA audit

-

I suggested in a letter Business Day published three years ago that “having regard to the billions of taxpayer money invested in SAA, it is incumbent on government to provide absolute transparen­cy to the citizens of this country and reveal full details of the (SAA/Takatso) sale of shares agreement, the valuations agreed upon, the players involved, their background­s and credential­s and all terms and conditions attached thereto including guarantees from all parties and nonperform­ance sanctions. Given the mendacity of the ANC government, this transparen­cy should not be provided by it alone, but by a fully independen­t private sector or NGO financial audit” (“Keep tabs on ANC shift”, June 20 2021).

Weeks ago, public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan announced that the confidenti­al and secret negotiatio­ns were all above board (“No sign of corruption in SAA sale to Takatso, says legal adviser”, March 7). Then, less than a week later, he told SA the SAA-Takatso deal was off (“SAA’s R3bn deal with Takatso falls apart”, March 13).

These developmen­ts have triggered new and serious concerns about the integrity and ethics of the whole process, and the public and media are speculativ­ely connecting their own dots. They need convincing that this transactio­n involving the sale of public assets does not involve the typical wheeling and dealing of government officials and the private sector intended to financiall­y benefit the ANC and its cadres. My call in 2021 for a “fully independen­t ... financial audit” seems more appropriat­e and urgent now than ever before.

David Gant

Kenilworth

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa