The Citizen (KZN)

Denel ‘about to implode’

UNION SAYS WORKERS MAY NOT GET DECEMBER PAY SA National Defence Force’s woes rebound on arms manufactur­er.

- Brian Sokutu brians@citizen.co.za

Problems at Denel, the struggling state-owned arms and defence equipment manufactur­er, have been exacerbate­d by the underfundi­ng of the South African National Defence Force (SANDF), which finds it hard to buy new equipment from the entity, according to defence expert Helmut Heitmann.

So financiall­y stressed is Denel that Solidarity deputy general secretary Johan Botha has expressed concern that employees may not get their full salaries and bonuses by December, with the company canvassing solutions from the trade union.

Denel has been kept afloat by the controvers­ial R290 million unsecured loan obtained from Regiments Capital – the City of Joburg fund management company – during Parks Tau’s tenure as mayor.

Explaining why Denel faced a crisis, Heitmann cited “a combinatio­n of factors”, one of which was the underfundi­ng of defence.

“The SANDF can neither acquire new equipment from Denel or anyone else, nor fund research and developmen­t of equipment.

“That has hit Denel’s revenue stream and has the longer-term implicatio­n of no new products.

“Another aspect is that most armed forces are reluctant to buy equipment that is not used by the forces of the manufactur­ing country. Complex equipment is kept in service for 20 to 30 years and they want to be sure of through-life support.

“Having it in use by the forces of the manufactur­ing country is seen as a guarantee of that.

“So, when the SANDF cannot buy something into service, Denel finds it difficult to export.”

Describing Denel’s current financial situation as “a catastroph­e”, Heitmann said: “It is not clear what caused the implosion from a company whose situation was improving. All I can ascribe it to is poor management at the very top, corruption or both.

“One element seems to have been an unnecessar­y expansion of head office structures that swallowed money unproducti­vely.

“As the problems began to manifest, some key people left the group, making it less capable of research and developmen­t. This has led to inability to meet production schedules for orders.

“As money was used for other purposes or somehow disappeare­d, the companies of the group could not pay suppliers...”

This in turn led to late or missed deliveries and revenue stopped flowing.

Heitmann warned that if the government could not find funds to recapitali­se Denel or find foreign investors, “the Denel group will implode fairly quickly”.

“The best engineers will leave and things will then unravel very rapidly with little or no chance for recovery,” Heitmann said.

He said only the foreign-owned divisions, Rheinmetal­l Denel Munition and Hensoldt Optronics, would continue operating.

“Both are well managed and doing well in the internatio­nal market, and are backed by internatio­nal defence groups, which gets around the problem of the SANDF not buying items from them.

“The rest of Denel will disappear, except some bits that government will have to find a way to subsidise to support equipment in service,” said Heitmann.

This will leave the SANDF with challenges in supporting its existing equipment.

“The rest of the defence industry will wind down. South Africa will have to import all of its major equipment, which will reduce our strategic freedom of action.

“This will eat into foreign currency reserves, with the country losing about R8 billion annually.

He said the country would also lose “a key part of its high-tech sector”. “We will lose most of the 15 000 direct jobs and perhaps another 10 000 or so indirect jobs.” –

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? Models in creations by Indonesian designer Purana during the Jakarta Fashion Week in Indonesia. The event runs until today.
Picture: EPA-EFE Models in creations by Indonesian designer Purana during the Jakarta Fashion Week in Indonesia. The event runs until today.

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