Sowetan

“Interim board had no powers to fire Hlaudi”

Motsoeneng’s fight for his SABC job in abeyance

- By Neo Goba

In his bid to get his job back, former SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng has claimed that the interim board that fired him had no power to do so as, by then, he was no longer a top executive at the public broadcaste­r.

Motsoeneng’s legal representa­tives argued in his arbitratio­n case yesterday that a Memorandum of Incorporat­ion (MOI) existing at the SABC at the time meant that the interim could only fire the broadcaste­r’s three top executives - the chief executive; chief financial officer and chief operations officer.

They argued that Motsoeneng held none of these jobs when the interim board, headed by then acting chairwoman Khanyisile Kweyama acted against him.

“We will submit that the board of SABC did not have the powers to institute disciplina­ry proceeding­s against Mr Motsoeneng... what should have happened is that there should have been compliance with the disciplina­ry code [of the SABC].

“The disciplina­ry steps taken against him were procedural­ly unfair based in compliance with the MOI,” said Advocate Kgomosoane Mathipa for Motsoeneng.

He read out a clause from the MOI and then asked Kweyama, who is now deoputy chairwoman of the current board, if it gave the board powers to fire anyone else other than the top three executives.

Kweyama replied that there were other documents within the broadcaste­r’s policy which have clauses that gave the board powers to terminate employment contracts of any employee at the SABC.

“There are other documents that govern the relationsh­ip of the board with other employees. There is a board charter and board’s terms of reference that talk to employee matters,” she said.

This was in response to the fact that when the board fired Motsoeneng, he had been suspended pending the outcome of a disciplina­ry hearing, which found him guilty and recommende­d that he be fired.

The board then took a resolution to fire him on June 12.

“We don’t agree. The acting CEO was the highest level of manager, so in any hierarchy, the next level [of discipline] would be the board. The board couldn’t conduct the hearing themselves, that is why we put it to an independen­t person,” said Kweyama.

At the time of the hearing, Motsoeneng was facing charges of bringing the SABC into disrepute and breaching the terms of his suspension following a media briefing he held in Parktown, Johannesbu­rg, on April 19. Motsoeneng is fighting his dismissal at the CCMA.

The case will commence on May 2.

Acting CEO highest level of manager so next level would be the board Khanyisile Kweyama SABC NONEXECUTI­VE BOARD MEMBER

 ?? /VELI NHLAPO ?? Former SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng is fighting his dismissal at the CCMA in Johannesbu­rg.
/VELI NHLAPO Former SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng is fighting his dismissal at the CCMA in Johannesbu­rg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa