The Citizen (Gauteng)

Parly cuts KPMG loose

SNOWBALLIN­G: CITES RISKS AFTER FIRM’S ADMISSION OF DODGY CONDUCT

- Yadhana Jadoo yadhanaj@citizen.co.za

Parmed, medical aid scheme for MPs, unanimousl­y decides to end its contract with the disgraced firm.

Parliament’s decision to end its contractua­l relations with auditing firm KPMG has, by implicatio­n, acknowledg­ed the need for a probe into state capture, civil society says.

The board of Parmed, a medical aid scheme for members of parliament, of which Deputy Speaker Lechesa Tsenoli is chairperso­n, has unanimousl­y decided to end its contract with KPMG. Tsenoli said the board made the decision after considerin­g the “risks associated with doing business with KPMG after its recent admission of improper conduct that seriously tarnished the company’s reputation”.

KPMG recently withdrew its report into the SA Revenue Service’s (Sars) alleged “rogue unit”, and former finance minister Pravin Gordhan stated that the firm was a willing participan­t in state capture.

With regard to another contract KPMG has with parliament, which is aimed at reviewing the effectiven­ess of the parliament­ary service, there are discussion­s about immediatel­y terminatin­g the contract.

Future SA, a coalition of civil society organisati­ons against state capture, cited parliament’s move as significan­t. “Because parliament, having taken this step, will have to justify this in relation to own cause into inquiring about state capture,” Future SA’s Neeshan Balton said: “By taking this step, parliament agrees. And by implicatio­n they must probe state capture more seriously.

“What we are seeing is a number of institutio­ns and companies that have had KPMG contracted to them coming to the conclusion it’s not in their interests to keep them on. There is serious reputation­al risk for many companies who have KPMG as auditors and parliament felt the same.

“We are now seeing how others have been part of enabling state capture in SA, and KPMG are paying the price for their own folly.”

The Save SA campaign welcomed parliament’s decision. “More and more institutio­ns are realising the reputation­al risk associated with doing business with KPMG, and are making the correct decision to cut links,” Save SA’s Chris Vick said. “We expect this pattern to continue, at least until KPMG decides to play open cards with the public about its collaborat­ions with Sars and other parties involved in state capture.”

Organisati­on Undoing Tax Abuse’s Wayne Duvenhage said: “All contracts with business and government must be red-flagged if there are high costs involved.”

Nhlamu Dlomu, KPMG SA’s new CEO, said: “This is an unfortunat­e developmen­t, however, we respect Parmed’s decision.

“The local and internatio­nal KPMG teams and I have been talking to many of our clients and regulators to provide a detailed explanatio­n on steps we are taking to demonstrat­e KPMG’s continuing ability to serve their needs. We believe we have a strong team of skilled profession­als to take the business forward and are working tirelessly to rebuild public trust.” –

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