The Citizen (Gauteng)

Racing vicim of Covid-19

- Mike Moon

Major horse racing operator Phumelela is likely to apply for business rescue status “within a few days” – plunging the troubled South African industry into chaos.

World-renowned racehorse trainer Mike de Kock told the country to “expect mass euthanasia­s” as a result of disastrous financial losses in the wake of the government refusing to allow the sport to resume operations in the coronaviru­s lockdown.

In a letter to staff yesterday, Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Ltd, a JSE-listed company, said it did not envisage racing and betting on sporting events to resume “for some time” and was preparing for business rescue.

Some staff members will continue with admin work, but others will be put on “no work, no pay” status, said the letter.

Phumelela runs race meetings, racecourse­s and training centres on the Highveld, in Port Elizabeth and in Kimberley and manages racing in Cape Town under contract. It employs many thousands of people and controls six of South Africa’s eight racecourse­s.

This week the government turned down the combined racing industry’s pleas to resume action on a no-crowd basis, with only essential workers, strict hygiene and a televised product for betting. Officials decreed racing was “not an essential activity”.

That means many horse owners, reliant on flows of prize money from racing, cannot afford to keep their horses in training – leading De Kock and others to predict mass euthanasia.

De Kock said: “There’s two things that stick out in my mind and that’s job and horse welfare.

“We can expect – I know it’s a very, very ugly word – but we can expect mass euthanasia­s,” he said in an interview in a video recorded by racing presenter Andrew Bon and commission­ed by Drakenstei­n Stud in Western Cape.

“We don’t know where to give horses away. The ‘second-home’ market has virtually died. The grim reality is euthanasia and the grim reality is mass job reductions,” added De Kock.

There are more than 25 000 thoroughbr­ed horses in the country, with tens of thousands of people employed in looking after them – in training yards and in a well-regarded breeding sector.

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