Sunday Times

‘Top politician­s’ scored at VBS

Middlemen took a cut for persuading municipali­ties to invest in failed bank

- By CAIPHUS KGOSANA

● Middlemen who facilitate­d the transfer of municipal funds into the doomed VBS Mutual Bank were paid hefty commission­s for their work.

Those who earned handsome commission­s for enticing cash-strapped Limpopo municipali­ties to invest huge chunks of their budgets with VBS — which is now under curatorshi­p — included top politician­s in the province, ANC sources said.

The Reserve Bank said yesterday: “From the preliminar­y findings of the curator’s assessment it appears that VBS paid middlemen to entice municipali­ties and unions to place their money in VBS. These middlemen were remunerate­d on a commission basis.”

It did not elaborate, saying a forensic investigat­or had been appointed to dig deeper.

Municipal officials who signed for the investment­s could find themselves in hot water, with members of the Limpopo legislatur­e pushing for criminal charges to be brought.

On Wednesday, all the mayors, municipal managers and chief financial officers of municipali­ties that invested in VBS were hauled before the provincial legislatur­e’s cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs committee to explain themselves.

Dan Sebabi, a senior member of the legislatur­e, led the charge as municipal officials described one after the other how they took money that should have been used for service delivery and handed it to VBS. The curator appointed by the Reserve Bank to probe VBS has found that R900-million of that money has disappeare­d.

“We are dealing with an organised criminal syndicate, a group of criminals who will take service delivery money and invest it in a hole that is bottomless,” an angry Sebabi said.

“We want that money back into their ac- counts. Tell us howwe are going to get that money.”

He said when communitie­s found out that their underperfo­rming municipali­ties had handed money to VBS, it would lead to widespread anger.

“You are plunging Limpopo into a ball of fire. You tell our people you invest money when they don’t have water, when they don’t have roads.

“What do you expect our people to say? How do you expect them to respond?” he asked.

Snowy Kennedy, the chairwoman of the legislatur­e’s standing committee on public accounts, told the mayors and municipal officials that they had failed the people of Limpopo and should be held to account.

It also emerged during the hearings that most of the municipal officials who signed off on the investment­s had bypassed their own councils and not sought permission before committing millions of rands to VBS.

Eddie Makamo, the acting municipal manager of Collins Chabane municipali­ty in Malamulele, told the committee additional approval had not been needed in terms of the investment policy of the municipali­ty, which had been approved by its council.

“From this policy it’s obvious that the responsibi­lity to make investment­s is delegated to the administra­tion, the municipal manager and those that he or she delegates responsibi­lity to,” Makamo said.

Asked why the municipali­ty ignored National Treasury directives barring municipali­ties from investing in mutual banks, he said he only became aware of these directives after the money had been committed. “We made an assumption which we later realised we did not test correctly,” he said.

“We thought the banks operating are registered under the same act. Our impression was that VBS is registered under the same act, which turned out later not to be the case.”

Tinyiko Muchavi, the chief financial officer of the Vhembe municipali­ty, Musina, who signed off on the investment, also argued that the authority to do so had been delegated to his office.

“We did not see a reason to inform the mayor or council. This was an administra­tive decision,” he said.

The Limpopo provincial treasury is also institutin­g a forensic investigat­ion into the VBS saga.

Ten Limpopo municipali­ties initially invested a combined R1.5-billion in VBS. Three municipali­ties have since been repaid but the other seven — Fetakgomo-Greater Tubatse, Lepelle-Nkumpi, Collins Chabane, Vhembe District, Makhado, Greater Giyani and Ephraim Mogale — still have a combined balance of just over R1.1-billion held by VBS.

A report compiled by the National Treasury shows that the municipali­ties were promised suspicious­ly high returns over a very short period if they put money into VBS.

For example, the Fetakgomo-Greater Tubatse local municipali­ty in Sekhukhune initially invested R30-million with VBS in February last year and was told the money would earn 8% interest over a four-month term, earning the municipali­ty an extra R2.4-million.

The following month it placed another R40-million with VBS, this time with the promise that the money would earn R3.5million in interest in three months.

The municipali­ty pumped in another R100-million on July 12 last year and in November paid in two separate deposits of R30-million each for a total of R230-million.

This was supposed to earn the municipali­ty R10.6-million in interest, but now it cannot access the money and if the Reserve Bank does not come to its rescue at the conclusion of the curatorshi­p, the money might be lost forever.

You are plunging Limpopo into a ball of fire. What do you expect our people to say?

Dan Sebabi

Limpopo MPL

It’s obvious that the responsibi­lity to make investment­s is delegated to the administra­tion

Eddie Makamo

Acting municipal manager, Collins Chabane

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