Mail & Guardian

SIU probes Pule Mabe’s associates

Net widens as investigat­ors find evidence of fraudulent activity conducted in three provinces

- Thanduxolo Jika

Law enforcemen­t agencies are looking into how a company and a trust run by family members and close business associates of ANC spokespers­on Pule Mabe scored more than R149-million in suspicious contracts across three provinces.

The contracts involve the Mvest Trust and company Enviro Mobi —both run by Mabe’s cousin and his former business associate. Contracts were signed in North West, Gauteng and the Free State over a three-year period.

Mabe has said that his only involvemen­t in the deals is as the holder of a patent for an app that he had licensed to the trust and an associated company, Enviro Mobi. But the Mail & Guardian has previously reported how Mabe was himself a former director of Enviro Mobi and that the company was still being run by his close associates.

The Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) has already met with a North West government subsidiary, the North West Developmen­t Corporatio­n (NWDC), to investigat­e financial irregulari­ties in the awarding of a R49-million laundromat tender to Mvest Trust, run by Mabe’s cousin Eulender Rakoma and his former employee and business associate, Tinyiko Mahuntsi.

The SIU investigat­ion follows an internal probe at the NWDC that found that there was possible fraud in the payment of the R49-million to Mvest Trust, as the individual­s who signed for the payment did not have the authority to make the payment.

Of the two people who made the payment, former acting chief executive Mike Mthimunye has been suspended. The internal investigat­ions also found no evidence of any “substantia­l work performed” by Mvest Trust and that irregular expenditur­e was incurred by the NWDC as a result of this contract.

“We have met with the authoritie­s [law enforcemen­t] already and they are investigat­ing,” said NWDC chief executive Tshepo Phetla. “The SIU wrote a formal request for all the informatio­n they required. We gave them everything they required.”

An insider at the NWDC said the aim was to recover the monies paid to the trust and to ensure that those implicated in the transactio­n face criminal charges.

SIU spokespers­on Nazreen Pandor was unable to comment on the matter at the time of going to print.

Enviro Mobi is also being investigat­ed by the SIU for a R26million contract it had scored from the Gauteng department of agricultur­e and rural developmen­t last year.

The M&G revealed last month how Enviro Mobi was hastily paid R16million within just 10 days of signing the contract, despite a clear directive in the contract that payment only be made on delivery.

Further payments of R9.4-million and R1.6-million were made in October last year and March this year, respective­ly, for the acquisitio­n of 200 “kariki” motorbikes and fleet management.

Gauteng Premier David Makhura referred a contract from the company, which was meant to deliver three-wheeler karikis, to the SIU after allegation­s of financial irregulari­ties. Enviro Mobi was meant to deliver 50 karikis to 15 co-operatives, representi­ng 58 waste pickers, in the Ekurhuleni municipali­ty.

After much fanfare and a media charm offensive by Gauteng agricultur­e MEC Lebogang Maile last month, when he claimed he was handing over the karikis, the waste pickers have not seen a single one at their co-operatives, despite the millions paid to Enviro Mobi.

Instead, Enviro Mobi has slapped the Gauteng agricultur­e department with a letter of demand for R9-million for storing the motorbikes.

The M&G has also establishe­d that Enviro Mobi scored more than R74-million in a similar contract for karikis in the Free State from 2015 until early this year.

According to Ntai Mokhitli, communicat­ions head at the Free State department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs, the payments were made to Enviro Mobi to roll out a rapid-response servicedel­ivery call centre for waste pickers as well as a rapid-response capacity for refuse collection, and to provide three-wheeler motorbikes for waste recyclers.

But Mokhitli did not respond to further questions — over a period of three weeks — about whether Enviro Mobi had provided the services.

Setsoto municipali­ty in the Free State, which was one of the supposed beneficiar­ies of this project, confirmed that Enviro Mobi took back the karikis in June last year and that a call centre had not been establishe­d.

Seven karikis, provided by Enviro Mobi, had been in use in Ficksburg and one in Marquard.

 ??  ?? On guard: Pule Mabe says his involvemen­t in the trust was marginal
On guard: Pule Mabe says his involvemen­t in the trust was marginal

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