Axed Prasa board back in the saddle
BY COURT ORDER: MINISTER ACTED UNLAWFULLY
Directors were fired for alleged ‘misconduct’ after spat with minister.
Former transport minister Dipuo Peters’ decision to oust Passenger Rail Agency of SA (Prasa) board chairperson Popo Molefe and his directors was unlawful, arbitrary and irrational, a North Gauteng High Court judge ruled yesterday.
Judge Peter Mabuse set aside Peters’ decision on March 8 to remove the board and ordered that the directors, whose terms end in July, must be reinstated. “The minister appears to have given no consideration to the serious and prejudicial impact of the wholesale removal of the board on Prasa’s interest,” he said.
The judge also found that the minister had denied the directors a fair hearing before firing them, simply raising their alleged “misconduct” in an attempt to justify her unlawful conduct.
“It is in the public interest that the affairs of Prasa be properly regulated by an independent board of control independently of any interference from the government . ... It is of paramount importance that corruption in Prasa be exposed and prevented.
“The public has an interest to fight the deep-rooted corruption in the country because it compromises the democratic ethos, the institutions of democracy and gnaws at the rule of law,” he said.
The directors maintained their abrupt removal was aimed at thwarting ongoing investigations which had so far exposed fruitless, wasteful and irregular expenditure totalling at least R14 billion.
Peters, who resigned as a member of parliament last week after losing her job to Joe Maswanganyi in President Jacob Zuma’s March 31 Cabinet reshuffle, had also accused the board of deliberately getting rid of “corruption buster” Collins Letsoalo, who was appointed as acting Prasa CEO at her insistence to enable them to operate “unchecked”.
The board was fired after a public spat about Letsoalo’s massive salary increase, which they claimed was unlawful but which Peters said had been approved by Molefe. Judge Mabuse said Letsoalo was entitled to the same package as his predecessor. However, the board had the discretion to terminate his appointment and the minister should have accepted their decision rather than disciplined them.
The transport department said it would comment on the way forward “at the right time”.