Daily Dispatch

ANC mulls flogging some noncore assets to cut debt

- THANDO MAEKO

The ANC is considerin­g selling some of its noncore assets, including certain commercial properties at home and abroad, to lighten its debt burden.

The party is cash-strapped and often fails to pay taxes and salaries. This has put it in the crosshairs of the SA Revenue Service and the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).

Its financial difficulti­es come just as the party moves to reposition itself as steward of a wellrun country ahead of its internal leadership contest in December, after almost two years of failure to pay workers’ salaries totalling about R17m.

In August, its financial woes worsened when the FSCA ordered the ANC staff provident fund to compel the party to settle about R86m in accumulate­d contributi­on arrears that it owes fund members.

The debt-cutting proposal was presented to the ANC’S national executive committee (NEC) by party treasurer-general and aspirant deputy president Paul Mashatile at its three-day meeting at the weekend. The NEC is the ANC’S highest decision-making body between national conference­s, which are held every five years.

“There are properties in other countries that we feel we will not need to use any more and those will be sold off. And there are other assets we would still keep in foreign countries that are of historic and political value today,” Mashatile told reporters on Monday.

Without saying how much money the ANC seeks to raise, Mashatile said it would keep its headquarte­rs in the Zambian capital Lusaka and in the UK.

Properties that will remain in the party’s portfolio will be consolidat­ed and managed under one company yet to be registered, Mashatile said.

“The consolidat­ion of properties is not a fundraisin­g drive. It’s looking at whether the properties still add value in what we’re doing and whether others have historic sentimenta­l value to be kept.

“So you might find that some of those that we sell will not really give us much.

“But we may come to the conclusion that we’re not deriving anything from them, maybe somebody can find them to use and let’s dispose of them,” he said.

The ANC has blamed the Party Political Funding Act for its cash-flow woes. It came into effect in April 2021, requires disclosure of all donations of more than R100,000, and limits donors to R15m a year.

The act is aimed at providing transparen­cy regarding funds received by political parties from donors.

Recently, the ANC, which declared that it had received a R10m donation in the first quarter of 2022, missed the deadline to declare that donation by a month.

This in turn prompted the Electoral Commission of SA (IEC) to issue the party with a directive to explain the contravent­ion.

The party was given seven days to submit such representa­tion, failing which the IEC may impose a sanction on the ANC.

“That has created a lot of constraint on our fundraisin­g effort. We have since asked the minister [of home affairs] to look at amending that we have presented our proposals,” Mashatile said.

“However, our efforts at fundraisin­g have not died completely. It is difficult, but we are surviving.

“We have paid all our staff to date, and we will pay them this month and next month and the other month.”

 ?? ?? PAUL MASHATILE
PAUL MASHATILE

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