Sunday Times

ANC: Eskom life of Brian may be shortlived

Party ‘embarrasse­d’ by her approval of ’immoral’ move

- MZILIKAZI wa AFRIKA, THABO MOKONE and QAANITAH HUNTER mzilikazi@sundaytime­s.co.za mokonet@sundaytime­s.co.za hunterq@sundaytime­s.co.za

BRIAN Molefe’s return to the Eskom hot seat may be cut short if the ANC has its way.

The ANC says it will instruct Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown to reverse the decision when she appears before the party’s top leaders at Luthuli House tomorrow.

Party spokesman Zizi Kodwa said the party was “disappoint­ed and embarrasse­d” by Brown’s endorsemen­t of the Eskom board’s decision to reappoint Molefe to his old position.

The board offered Molefe his job back after Brown had blocked a R30million pension payout to Molefe.

Molefe had left Eskom under a dark cloud in November last year after the public protector’s State of Capture report revealed that he had relations with the controvers­ial Gupta family.

Molefe was then parachuted into parliament, in what was seen as a move to prepare him for the finance ministry post. But ANC and SACP leaders blocked his appointmen­t when Pravin Gordhan was removed.

Kodwa said that Brown would be told to rescind the decision or dissolve the Eskom board.

LUTHULI House wants Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown to overturn the decision to reappoint Brian Molefe Eskom CEO.

Brown will appear before the party’s top leaders tomorrow — at the same time that Molefe is expected to report for duty at Megawatt Park.

Party spokesman Zizi Kodwa said the ANC leaders would instruct Brown to reverse Molefe’s appointmen­t or dissolve the board, which is chaired by Ben Ngubane.

Kodwa said the ANC was disappoint­ed with Brown for endorsing a “clearly immoral and illegal” decision of the Eskom board.

“We want to express our disappoint­ment with the shareholde­r minister. We’re embarrasse­d as the ANC that she could embrace what appears to be illegal and immoral.

“The only moral thing we were expecting and we’re still expecting, is to rescind and reverse that decision or dismiss the Eskom board because with this decision, they have failed to [carry out] their fiduciary responsibi­lities.”

The ANC is also angry that Molefe resigned as an MP without informing chief whip Jackson Mthembu or secretary-general Gwede Mantashe.

ANC treasurer-general Zweli Mkhize said the ANC was “uncomforta­ble” about Molefe’s return to Eskom.

“We need to be very careful about decisions that might undermine the confidence our people have in us,” he said.

“We need to sit with the minister and get clarity about what led to this because we are very uncomforta­ble.

“I wasn’t aware of [Molefe’s move back to Eskom] before it was announced and it was not discussed in any of the structures that I sit in.”

Molefe joined parliament as an MP after resigning from Eskom after former public protector Thuli Madonsela raised concerns about his possible conflict of interest involving the Gupta family.

His move to parliament was seen as preparatio­n for him to become finance minister.

But his hopes were dashed when top ANC leadership reportedly rejected President Jacob Zuma’s plan to appoint Molefe as Pravin Gordhan’s replacemen­t.

The Sunday Times last month reported that the Eskom board had approved a R30-million payout to Molefe and a further R7-million “for his early retirement”.

Shortly after this Brown said she had declined Molefe’s R30million pension payout and asked the board to explain it.

But on Friday, Brown changed her tune as she came out in support of the board’s decision to reinstate Molefe.

Brown said she believes that “Eskom will benefit from the return to the helm” of Molefe.

“The board’s proposal ultimately represents a significan­tly better value propositio­n to the South African fiscus than the previous pension proposal,” she said.

Brown declined to comment on the ANC meeting.

Yesterday the Eskom board refused to disclose exactly when the board resolved to reinstate Molefe.

Board spokesman Khulani Qoma said: “The board can’t divulge either the date it made the decision or when it approached Molefe.” The Sunday Times contacted four board members, who also refused to discuss the matter.

Qoma said Molefe agreed to repay the R7-million he was paid in January before November this year.

“Brian didn’t resign, he applied and was granted an early retirement. The board’s decision to grant it was legitimate and proper,” said Qoma.

He added that Molefe “didn’t jump in jubilation when the board approached him with an offer” but there were serious negotiatio­ns.

He said the Eskom Pension Fund paid the R30-million into Molefe’s pension account and not his personal bank account.

Qoma denied that Eskom had interviewe­d a number of people for the position of CEO, which had been advertised.

“The search process to identify a suitable candidate for the position of group chief executive has not evolved to any interviews of identified candidates. Due to this, there can be no reasonable expectatio­n of placement.”

But the Sunday Times confirmed that Woodburn Mann, a placement agency that was appointed by Eskom to recruit a suitable candidate for its group CEO, had interviewe­d seven people for the job, including former acting CEO Matshela Koko, who was this week put on leave pending an investigat­ion into how a company his stepdaught­er was a director and shareholde­r of was awarded contracts worth more than R1-billion.

Anoj Singh, the company’s chief financial officer, was also interviewe­d for the CEO position. He declined to talk to the Sunday Times yesterday. — Additional reporting by Jeff Wicks

 ??  ?? POWER PLAY: Lynne Brown
POWER PLAY: Lynne Brown

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