The Citizen (KZN)

Molefe’s tough road to pension

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So, Brian Molefe’s brief spell as a member of parliament ends with his resignatio­n from the House of Assembly tomorrow, a departure less tearful in many eyes than his tearful exit as his departure as chief executive of Eskom in November. We can only presume that there were some frantic sotto voce discussion­s among the regulars in the Saxonwold shebeen, glasses of Johnny Blue close to their elbows, about where Molefe – strongly tipped as a Cabinet member, but ignored in President Jacob Zuma’s less-than-popular reshuffle of ministers – about the future.

Molefe heads back to his former job with the power utility next week after the board rescinded his applicatio­n for early retirement.

It is no secret that the Eskom board met after Public Enterprise­s Minister Lynne Brown objected to Eskom’s R30 million pension payout for Molefe, which she only discovered through the media on April 16, a payout the minister described as “very irregular”. As an aside, it is worth noting that it would take nearly three decades of parliament­ary service to earn the same amount as the payout proposed for him by Eskom.

Molefe requested early retirement following former public protector Thuli Madonsela’s State of Capture report with some of the queries raised then still hanging heavy over his head.

Chief among these is Eskom’s determined push to follow a nuclear option which would cost this country R1 trillion.

There is also the unresolved matter of Eskom’s ties to the lucrative coal supply contracts with the Gupta-owned Tegeta Exploratio­n and Resources.

A Pricewater­houseCoope­rs report commission­ed by the utility found Tegeta was not put through the power utility’s supplier developmen­t programme, to ensure passing muster to do business with the stateowned entity. Molefe has a tough road ahead before he draws his pension.

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