The Citizen (KZN)

Optimum to exit rescue

R461M NPA DEAL WILL HELP REVIVE THE MINE AND RESTORE THOUSANDS OF JOBS Mine will be operated by Liberty Coal, controlled by former Gupta associate Daniel McGowan.

- Ciaran Ryan Moneyweb

The storied history of Optimum Coal Mine (OCM), once the most prized trophy in the Gupta family’s portfolio of state capture assets, continues; it is about to exit business rescue after six agonising years of court bust-ups and near-death experience­s.

Six years after being placed in voluntary business rescue, control of the mine will pass to Liberty Coal, controlled by British businessma­n and former Gupta associate Daniel McGowan.

This follows an approach to the court by the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), Liberty Coal and others for an expedited forfeiture hearing, which would allow Liberty Coal to pay R461.7 million to the state, without admitting liability, thereby neutering the NPA’s claim that Gupta-controlled Tegeta Exploratio­n & Resources had purchased Optimum assets with the proceeds of crime.

In March 2022, the NPA won a preservati­on order against Tegeta and its roughly R3.4 billion worth of shares in OCM and the Optimum Coal Terminal at Richards Bay on the grounds that it was acquired through corruption. This was the largest preservati­on order in South African history.

The rescue of OCM was anything but smooth. There were multiple attempts by creditors to liquidate it, and Gupta proxies were never far from the fray.

It seems somewhat astonishin­g that the NPA signed off on the deal giving Liberty Coal control, though this seems to have been the path of greatest expedience for reviving the mine and restoring the jobs of thousands of workers.

Less than two years ago, the NPA led evidence in court that funds provided to McGowan’s company were derived “from money stolen from the South African government”.

Liberty Coal is a subsidiary of McGowan’s Templar Capital, which is the single largest creditor in OCM, having acquired its R1.3 billion claim via a cession of another company in which McGowan is director, Centaur Ventures.

Liberty Coal’s agreement to pay the forfeiture settlement of R461.7 million to the state removes the potential for confiscati­on of property under the Prevention of Organised Crime Act (POCA).

Of this, R100 million will be paid immediatel­y, and the balance over two years.

All funds will be overseen by an independen­t administra­tor and will be distribute­d to eligible creditors, reads a statement by Liberty Coal.

The Gupta’s acquisitio­n of OCM was born of original sin, having been purchased with funds advanced by Eskom and others.

The mine was then asset-stripped, so that miners were sent undergroun­d without proper safety gear and hoisting cables were allowed to atrophy for want of proper maintenanc­e.

The attorney representi­ng the business rescue practition­ers, Bouwer van Niekerk, says that Liberty Coal’s was the only offer of substance on the table, and that the business rescue plans, once implemente­d, mean the mine assets will be able to operate unencumber­ed by debt for the first time in recent history.

“This is the most practical solution we have to get the mine out of business rescue and operating once again,” he says.

This is quite a turnaround for Liberty Coal, whose claim was initially rejected by the business rescue practition­ers (BRPs).

The NPA expressed its concern at the BRPs’ use of contract miners to work what were called mini-pits to create cash flow to keep the mine functionin­g and to stave off possible liquidatio­n.

Once OCM exits business rescue, Liberty Coal will take control of the mine from the contract miners.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? TURNAROUND. Liberty Coal’s agreement to pay the forfeiture settlement of R461 million to the state removes the potential for confiscati­on of property.
Picture: Bloomberg TURNAROUND. Liberty Coal’s agreement to pay the forfeiture settlement of R461 million to the state removes the potential for confiscati­on of property.

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