The Citizen (Gauteng)

Molefe pension ‘irregular’

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The head of Eskom’s pension and provident fund admitted yesterday that former Eskom CEO Brian Molefe, pictured, should never have been entitled to a pension from the power utility because he was employed on a fixed five-year contract.

“He should never have been a member of the fund in the first place,” Sibusiso Luthuli, CEO of the Eskom Pension and Provident Fund (EPPF), told a parliament­ary inquiry into Eskom’s affairs.

Under questionin­g from the evidence leader in the inquiry, Nthuthuzel­o Vanara, Luthuli also confirmed that Eskom had created the impression that Molefe had been permanentl­y appointed, before giving instructio­ns that he should be granted extraordin­ary pension benefits at the age of 50.

“In other words, you acted in good faith after an impression was created to you by Eskom that Mr Molefe was a permanent employee? … And we know now today that such representa­tions were not correct? In other words, Eskom misreprese­nted the facts to the pension fund?”

Luthuli said the fund had no reason to doubt the informatio­n given to it by then Eskom chairman Ben Ngubane and had subsequent­ly applied the rules of the pension fund as per usual.

He had earlier detailed how Eskom had instructed that an additional 156 months be added to the actual 16 months Molefe spent in Eskom’s employ, to allow him to retire at 50 with the same benefits he would have earned had he remained at the company until the age of 63.

The fund was also instructed, he said, to waive all penalties linked to the allocation, on the understand­ing that Eskom would reimburse the fund.

According to the fund’s calculatio­ns, this should have given Molefe a pension of around R26 million, but this rose to R30.1 million for two reasons. Firstly, the fund had performed its calculatio­ns on the assumption that his salary had remained unchanged and that his spouse was five years younger than him.

It had to recalculat­e the sum, to factor in a salary increase and the fact that his wife was in fact “much, much younger” and that in the event of his death, the pension had to continue providing for her.

Molefe opted to take a third of the sum in cash and to take a monthly pension from the remaining two-thirds, which gave him a gross pension income of R110 000.

Molefe left Eskom under a cloud in late 2016. – ANA

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