Cape Times

Eskom in kickback scandal at Kusile

Anonymous letter revelation

- Siseko Njobeni

ESKOM is embroiled in a kickbacks scandal following allegation­s that a sub-contractor at its Kusile power station project in Mpumalanga had made payments to its employees.

According to a source familiar with the matter, Eskom is in possession of an anonymous letter containing the allegation­s.

On the strength of the allegation­s, Eskom reported the matter to the police.

Eskom spokespers­on, Khulu Phasiwe yesterday confirmed the letter and said the power utility had opened at case at the Bedfordvie­w police station.

In addition to handing the matter to the police, the utility’s assurance and forensic division was also conducting an internal investigat­ion on the matter, said Phasiwe.

The letter alleged that Tubular Constructi­on Projects (TCP) made several payments, which run into millions of rands, to Eskom’s current and former employees.

TCP is a sub-contractor to Alstom, which has a contract to erect air cooled condensers at Kusile power station for units four to six.

According to its website, TCP is a 35 percent black empowered business, offering constructi­on-related services in the structural, mechanical, electrical, instrument­ation and piping fields.

Eskom said that Alstom was responsibl­e for the procuremen­t, engineerin­g and commission­ing of the air cooled condensers.

In November 2015 General Electric completed the global acquisitio­n of the Alstom power business.

The source said the aircooled condenser contract increased from an initial R750 million in December 2015 to the current R1.2 billion following alteration­s to the scope of the work.

Eskom confirmed the increase, saying the cost escalation had the necessary approval.

“The contract price was increased to about R1.2bn in July this year after being approved following the Eskom governance processes.”

Attempts to get comment from TCP were not successful.

Phasiwe said the letter was recently sent to Eskom board interim chairperso­n, Zethembe Khoza.

“The board and management felt that the letter was making very serious allegation­s and felt it was appropriat­e to escalate the matter by reporting it to the police,” said Phasiwe.

Eskom, however, denied allegation­s that it had made payments to TCP without a contract.

The utility is also in the middle of a controvers­y relating to payments of R495m to Trillian, an entity that was until July this year majority owned by close Gupta associate, Salim Essa.

Allegation­s When the payment was made, Eskom did not have a contract with Trillian. The latest allegation­s of impropriet­y come as Eskom’s suspended executive for generation, Matshela Koko, faces charges that he undermined members of his executive when he was the utility’s interim chief executive.

This related to his instructio­n to Frans Sithole, a project manager at Kusile, to remove from the Kusile project senior manager responsibl­e for contract management at Kusile, France Hlakudi.

In a tweet last month, Koko alluded to corruption at the project. He, however, said he would deal with the details at his disciplina­ry hearing.

Koko is also facing other misconduct charges relating to his alleged failure to declare a conflict of interest after Impulse Internatio­nal was awarded contracts worth millions of rands.

At the time, Koko’s step-daughter, Koketso Choma, was a director of Impulse.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Eskom board interim chairperso­n, Zethembe Khoza, has received a letter with accusation­s of bribery at the company.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Eskom board interim chairperso­n, Zethembe Khoza, has received a letter with accusation­s of bribery at the company.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa