Daily Dispatch

Ngubane defends Hlaudi’s record, massive pay hike

- By BEKEZELA PHAKATHI

FORMER SABC board chairman Ben Ngubane yesterday defended in parliament the broadcaste­r’s former chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng’s track record and massive pay hike.

Ngubane told parliament’s ad hoc committee leading a probe into the broadcaste­r that the controvers­ial former chief operating officer was skilled and that his salary “adjustment­s” were in line with human resource processes.

Ngubane also insisted that Motsoeneng had “saved” the SABC.

“The SABC started haemorrhag­ing money from 2007 . . . we found a mess . . . we did everything . . . I reject the idea that the corruption and destructio­n at the SABC happened because of us,” a visibly irritated Ngubane told the inquiry.

Asked how Motsoeneng came to occupy senior positions at the SABC given that he did not have a matric‚ Ngubane said the former chief operating officer was appointed because of his skills.

He said it was no secret that Motsoeneng did not have a matric certificat­e and previous boards had been aware of this.

This was despite the existence of a damning 2014 public protector report which found that Motsoeneng had fabricated a matric qualificat­ion‚ purged those he disagreed with and irregularl­y increased his salary from R1.5-million to R2.4-million in one year.

Ngubane said Motsoeneng’s huge salary hike was “not an increase‚ but an adjustment” in line with his position at executive level.

“Salaries at the SABC are normally very high . . .

“Hlaudi came from the provinces at a very low salary. The disparitie­s were huge . . . this committee must go to the SABC and look through all documents before you can judge us‚” Ngubane said.

He said Motsoeneng’s 63% salary adjustment in one year made sense considerin­g that he occupied a senior position with added responsibi­lities.

Motsoeneng was the SABC’s group executive manager for stakeholde­r relations before he was shifted to act as chief operating officer‚ a position he eventually assumed on a permanent basis in 2014.

“He‚ Motsoeneng [in his capacity as head of stakeholde­r relations]‚ helped re-establish trust between the unions and the SABC.

“He took me to talk to people at regional offices.

“We have done a number of things to make the SABC work. Hlaudi did some wonderfulw­ork . . . despite the fact that he did not have a formal qualificat­ion‚” Ngubane said.

Ngubane‚ a former KwaZulu-Natal premier and national arts and culture minister‚ chaired the SABC board from December 2009 until he resigned amid controvers­y in March 2013.

He is currently the chairman of the Eskom board.

He told the ad hoc committee that he did not understand why he was called to testify, given that the current problems at the SABC happened after he had left.

He pointed out that Motsoeneng became acting chief operating officer during his tenure as board chairman‚ and assumed the position on a permanent basis only after Ngubane had left the public broadcaste­r.

Motsoeneng’s appointmen­t was made despite the public protector’s report.

“I came [to the ad hoc committee] because I have served in parliament for 10 years and I respect parliament. I have serious reservatio­ns and reserve the right to take further action if the findings are adverse‚” Ngubane said.

He said he would have wanted to challenge the public protector’s report but was unable to do so because this would have cost him millions.

Ngubane said some of the testimony that the ad hoc committee had heard was “simply meant to damage my name”.

Former acting SABC chief executive, Phil Molefe, told the inquiry last month that Motsoeneng was promoted ahead of more senior and qualified people to become acting chief executive and then chief operating officer in less than a week.

Molefe said there were glaring governance oversights during his time as acting chief executive‚ including that Motsoeneng was allowed to sit in on board meetings when he was not a board member.

According to Molefe‚ during a meeting in which Ngubane was also present‚ Motsoeneng threatened to “go to Pretoria” – an apparent reference to President Jacob Zuma‚ after he (Molefe) refused to give him a R500 000 increase. — TMG

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