Cape Times

Gigaba, Buthelezi back PIC’s Matjila

Reports of ‘looting’ slammed

- Luyolo Mkentane Wednesday, September 27 2017

FINANCE Minister Malusi Gigaba and Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) chief executive Dr Dan Matjila appeared to close ranks yesterday and slammed reports suggesting there was a “looting campaign” aimed at using R100 billion from the PIC to bail out struggling parastatal­s.

Gigaba said the “attack” on the PIC’s credibilit­y was an isolated incident that needed to be nipped in the bud and there was a a need to “show a united face as critical stakeholde­rs”.

Gigaba, his deputy and PIC chairperso­n Sfiso Buthelezi, Matjila and National Treasury director-general Dondo Mogajane addressed the media in Pretoria yesterday.

It followed a newspaper report over the weekend that quoted Matjila as saying certain people wanted him removed from the PIC, so as to have easier access to the nearly R2trillion that Africa’s largest fund manager controls on behalf of government employees.

Matjila reportedly said the motivation was to try and remove him because “I’ve got the keys. They’re looking for the keys to the big safe.”

Gigaba, who admitted he was upset over the report, said there were “no attempts to dip into the pension funds of government employees for reasons that are unscrupulo­us”.

He later said National Treasury would not “dip into the PIC funds” at all and that they would work as a united leadership to protect the assets of PIC clients.

“We will act in the best interests of their lifelong assets so that at the point of retirement they have them available to them,” the minister said.

He rallied behind Matjila, saying the PIC chief executive was “concerned about the articles”, which sought to impair the PIC’s credibilit­y and cause “anxiety among pensioners”.

“There is absolutely no truth to allegation­s that there is a looting campaign out there that seeks to dip dirty hands into the R1.9trln of the PIC,” Gigaba said, adding that from time to time, people would try to “drive a wedge between us”.

He was emphatic that “to my knowledge, there is no R100bn that we have requested” from the PIC.

Matjila – who reportedly rejected a request for a R6bn loan for SAA from Dudu Myeni, chairperso­n of the cash-strapped national carrier – said the article was “distastefu­l, inaccurate and designed to drive a wedge between myself and the minister”.

Matjila said he had formally laid a complaint with the newspaper’s senior management, was weighing legal options to try to deal with it properly, and that he would release a statement today.

He claimed to enjoy good support from Gigaba, Buthelezi and the PIC board.

“I enjoy good support from the deputy minister and the board of the PIC… I can assure our clients that the PIC is on solid ground; we are not disturbed by this, we are focused on the work, they can rest assured that their money is safe.”

He declined an interview with Business Report after the briefing, saying: “I would like to stay out of the public for the time being.”

At the briefing, Gigaba said he called a meeting between the Treasury and PIC officials as he wanted to find out if it was true that attempts were afoot to remove Matjila from the PIC, among other allegation­s.

“I made it clear to the board that I personally have not attempted in any possible way to get myself involved in the business of the PIC.”

Mogajane said while there had been engagement­s regarding the funding issues SAA has had, at no point did “we go to Dr Matjila to say he must advance money to bail out SAA”.

Buthelezi said they rejected the allegation­s with contempt.

“People come up with allegation­s without providing an iota of evidence… As the PIC board of directors we reject suggestion­s there are plans being hatched somewhere to remove the chief executive,” he said.

A week after the allegation­s against Matjila surfaced, labour federation Fedusa said it was seriously considerin­g ditching the PIC as an investment vehicle for its 230 000 state employees members.

Fedusa general secretary Dennis George said they were concerned the lack of good governance at state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) would spill over to the PIC.

He warned that pulling out of the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) was one of the options they were considerin­g in order to protect their members’ interests.

According to the PIC’s 2016 annual report, the GEPF is the largest client, with a contributi­on of 88.2 percent of total assets under management. Other clients include the Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund, Compensati­on Commission­er Fund, Compensati­on Commission­er Pension Fund and Associated Institutio­ns Pension Fund. The former finance minister has called for SOEs to be cleaned up before government bailed them out.

@luyolomken­tane

 ?? PHOTO: THOBILE MATHONSI/ANA ?? Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba and Dr Daniel Matjila, left, during a media briefing on reports that the National Treasury wants to use R100 billion of the PIC’s funds.
PHOTO: THOBILE MATHONSI/ANA Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba and Dr Daniel Matjila, left, during a media briefing on reports that the National Treasury wants to use R100 billion of the PIC’s funds.

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