Sunday Times

SARS ethics boss revealed as CV cheat

Adviser to a succession of top officials invented his BCom after repeatedly failing accounting

- PIET RAMPEDI, STEPHAN HOFSTATTER and MZILIKAZI WA AFRIKA

A TOP tax official faked his academic qualificat­ions to hold onto senior positions that earned him a salary that amounted to millions over the years.

Yolisa Pikie, special adviser to the suspended deputy commission­er of the South African Revenue Service, Ivan Pillay, quit last week after he was caught lying about his qualificat­ions.

Pikie claimed to have a BCom degree from the University of the Western Cape when he applied for his job with Pillay, who was suspended in December for his role in setting up a rogue spy unit and whose highest formal qualificat­ion is a matric.

However, Pikie’s academic record from the university shows that he did not complete his degree after repeatedly failing several subjects, including accounting, statistics, management and industrial psychology.

SARS sources said he also passed himself off as a lawyer at official meetings, even though he has only an incomplete law degree from the University of South Africa.

SARS spokesman Luther Lebelo confirmed this week that Pikie had been charged with “misreprese­ntation of his own qualificat­ions” but declined to comment further.

Pikie’s 13-year career at SARS ended abruptly on April 2 when he tendered his resignatio­n “with immediate effect” shortly after being confronted with his academic record.

SARS has refused to accept his resignatio­n and wants to complete disciplina­ry proceeding­s against him. It has also opened a criminal complaint of fraud against him.

Despite faking his CV, Pikie rose rapidly through the ranks at SARS.

According to his CV, after sev- B CON: Yolisa Pikie has neither the BCom nor the law degree he claimed to have eral years as a revenue analyst and a stint as media relations manager, he became a “special assistant” to the then SARS commission­er, Pravin Gordhan, to manage Gordhan’s “transition to minister of finance”.

Next Pikie led a team that interprete­d tax law and helped negotiate internatio­nal tax treaties, before ending up with the coveted unofficial position of special adviser to Pillay as an acting commission­er.

Ironically, his official job title was “senior manager: governance and strategy”, which meant he oversaw ethics and good governance at SARS, with an annual salary of R900 000.

SARS sources said Pikie’s fake qualificat­ions could not be traced when he applied for the job because Pillay had, allegedly, hired him and four other officials without following due process.

Pikie would neither confirm nor deny faking his qualificat­ions and declined to answer specific questions.

“I am currently in dispute with SARS about various issues, and I do not consider it appropriat­e to engage with the media at this stage.

“I will confront all allegation­s against me in the appropriat­e forum.”

Another former SARS official, investigat­ions head Johan van Loggerenbe­rg, exaggerate­d his qualificat­ions by passing himself off to a journalist as an MBA graduate.

He quit SARS in February amid a probe into his role in the rogue unit.

An MBA typically takes two or three years to complete. Van Loggerenbe­rg obtained his by attending a one-day seminar by motivation­al speaker Mervyn Niland in 2003.

In a 2004 promotiona­l pamphlet, Niland says a “highly valued” MBA that usually costs more than R100 000 and “four years of study” is now “within reach” by getting a gold-framed MBA certificat­e after attending a one-day seminar.

Seminar topics include “management by intuition; turning problems into profits; coaches, mentors and short cuts; and speed-reading and power learning”.

Van Loggerenbe­rg denied claiming to have “academic qualificat­ions that I did not have”.

“I obtained my qualificat­ions through hard work and long hours,” he said.

Meanwhile, investigat­ions into the rogue spy unit at SARS, including by audit firm KPMG, are expected to be wrapped up and made public in June.

He oversaw ethics and good governance at SARS, with an annual salary of R900 000

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa