Sowetan

How Zuma’s fall cost Manyi a newspaper

Afro Voice loses millions as its clients pull out

- By Yoliswa Sobuwa and Peter Ramothwala

Mzwanele Manyi blames his newspaper’s financial woes on negative publicity surroundin­g former president Jacob Zuma and the Gupta family.

Manyi, the owner of Afro Voice newspaper, formerly The New Age, which shut its doors last month leaving workers in limbo, is applying for the company’s liquidatio­n in court.

He told the North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria that the newspaper’s revenue declined drasticall­y after the Free State and North West provincial government­s withdrew advertisin­g from it.

Manyi, who acquired the newspaper from the Guptas for R150-million on a vendor-financing deal, has told the court that in a period of four months revenue declined from more than R5-million to R255 650.

Manyi is applying for liquidatio­n of the business with six other directors of Afrotone Media Holdings, which also owns Afro View Television (formerly ANN7).

In his affidavit, Manyi said Afrotone Media Holdings is commercial­ly insolvent and there are no prospects of company rescue under prevailing circumstan­ces.

Manyi said the company had accumulate­d an operationa­l debt as at the end of June 2018 of about R23-million.

This is after the government­s of Free State and North West formally cancelled their bulk subscripti­ons. Adding to its woes was the protracted legal dispute with the SABC over the TNA business briefings conducted with the company.

According to court papers, Westdawn Investment­s did not renew its annual advertisin­g of R1.7-million a month and Koornfonte­in Mines sponsorshi­p worth R1-million per month also came to an end. Both companies are owned by the controvers­ial Gupta family.

“Notwithsta­nding the various efforts to commercial­ly sustain the business of Afro Voice in the face of the substantia­l decline in government advertisin­g, the indefinite suspension of the TNA business briefings and the ever increasing operationa­l costs, Afro Voice is no longer in a position to financiall­y [do so],” read the court papers.

“Accordingl­y, the board of directors of Afro Voice have no other alternativ­e but to commence with liquidatio­n proceeding­s …”

Meanwhile, Afro Voice journalist­s who were abruptly told not to come to work last month are still fighting to get their severance packages.

An employee told Sowetan yesterday that Manyi had withheld informatio­n regarding the liquidatio­n and that they had only been notified a day before the closing date to make opposing submission­s.

“He is toying with our lives because we thought he was playing open cards. We only learnt yesterday that we should notify the attorney on Tuesday [today] of our intention to oppose the liquidatio­n applicatio­n.”

Another journalist said all they want is to get what’s left in the company before it is liquidated.

“What is confusing is that Manyi has registered another media company, Afro News. How will he run that company if he failed to run Afro Voice? There should be no problem in paying our severance packages if he is still in a position to register another company,” the journalist said.

The company’s attorney, Ross Richards, said the court will decide if it is commercial­ly insolvent on Tuesday next week.

 ?? /VELI NHLAPO/ SOWETAN. ?? Mzwanele Manyi says Afrotone Media Holdings is commercial­ly insolvent.
/VELI NHLAPO/ SOWETAN. Mzwanele Manyi says Afrotone Media Holdings is commercial­ly insolvent.

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