The Herald (South Africa)

Bank seeks protection from ANC

Affidavit claims Mantashe, ministers applied pressure over Gupta accounts

- Carol Paton

STANDARD Bank has filed an explosive affidavit in the Pretoria High Court appealing for protection against executive interferen­ce in the bank and detailing the extensive political pressure it came under from the ANC‚ cabinet ministers and Gupta-controlled Oakbay after it closed the company’s accounts.

BusinessLi­ve reports the affidavit is in support of Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan’s applicatio­n for a declarator­y order from the court‚ confirming that he does not have the authority to intervene in relationsh­ips between banks and their clients.

Standard Bank‚ which is also named as a respondent‚ has gone further than Gordhan’s applicatio­n‚ requesting the court to confirm that no member of the executive‚ and not just the finance minister‚ may interfere in banking relationsh­ips.

The affidavit by group counsel Ian Sinton‚ filed on Wednesday‚ also reveals that Standard Bank was asked to meet the ANC as well as the cabinet inter-ministeria­l committee‚ in an attempt to place it under political pressure to reverse its decision.

The arguments advanced in both meetings as well as in a third meeting with former Oakbay chief executive Nazeem Howa were substantia­lly the same.

The meeting with the ANC‚ which took place at Luthuli House on April 21‚ included ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe‚ his deputy Jessie Duarte and the head of the ANC’s economic transforma­tion committee‚ Enoch Godongwana.

In the meeting, Standard Bank chief executive Sim Tshabalala was asked to respond to the accusation “that it was colluding with monopoly capital to oppress a black-owned business”.

On May 5‚ Tshabalala had a meeting with members of the inter-ministeria­l committee‚ which had been tasked to have meetings with the banks to discuss the Gupta accounts.

Present at this meeting were Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane‚ Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant and Mzwanele (Jimmy) Manyi‚ who said he was attending in his capacity as a ministeria­l adviser.

“It was clear from the inquiries directed by the ministers and their adviser ... that their main concern was the Oakbay accounts,” Sinton said in his affidavit.

“They wanted to secure an outcome favourable to Oakbay‚ by using their political and executive power.”

It is also reveals that Oakbay had lobbied an internatio­nal shareholde­r of Standard Bank, claiming it had illegally colluded with other banks, and saying that its motivation­s in closing the accounts were racist.

Prior to meeting Tshabalala‚ Oakbay had also indicated its intention to sue the bank. However‚ Howa later said that a letter to this effect had been sent in error.

They wanted to secure an outcome favourable to Oakbay

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