The Herald (South Africa)

Gupta links to letter penned in Nene’s name

Ex-finance minister says document tied to funding of locomotive deal is ‘fake/fabricatio­n’

- Graeme Hosken and Kyle Cowan

GUPTA-linked business associates penned and peddled a letter in the name of former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene – who has labelled it a “fake/fabricatio­n” – related to the funding of Transnet’s multibilli­on-rand locomotive procuremen­t project.

The Times has found the letter in the hundreds of thousands of leaked Gupta e-mails.

The letter, written in Nene’s name, was addressed to the China Developmen­t Bank board chairman Hu Huaibang in January 2015.

In June 2015, Transnet’s chief executive, Siyabonga Gama, who was then acting chief executive, announced at a World Economic Forum media conference that the bank had agreed to a R30-billion loan.

The loan was nearly the exact amount paid to the Chinese companies that won most of the tender, China South Rail and North China Rail.

The e-mail’s metadata shows that the letter was actually written by Tewodros Gebreselas­ie, a senior economic adviser with Regiments Capital.

Regiments is an investment company that was involved in the now-controvers­ial Transnet locomotive procuremen­t project, which was worth more than R50-billion.

The Guptas are reported to have received more than R5-billion in alleged kickbacks from China South Rail, which was awarded the bulk of the contract.

Nene, in response to queries from The Times, said the letter was “clearly a fake/fabricatio­n and could not have come from my office”.

Nene said he was baffled about how this letter had ended up in the in-tray of Gupta associates.

“It’s worrisome. I do not understand it. It says a great deal about confidenti­ality, especially between the department and stateowned entities.’’

“It’s worrying as it could implicate you as a minister of finance. This is completely unacceptab­le and the [Treasury] department must apply its mind to this.”

Gebreselas­ie, according to the e-mails, then sent the letter to former Transnet chief financial officer Anoj Singh – now Eskom chief financial officer – on January 20 2015 and copied former Regiments director Eric Wood, his boss. Wood had instructed Gebre-selasie to write the letter.

The letter ended with Gupta-owned Sahara computers chief executive Ashu Chawla.

Chawla did not respond to requests for comment.

Wood told The Times he had acted in the best interests of Transnet, which was Regiments’ client at the time.

Wood said Singh had requested him to draft the letter.

“It would always be in my interest to get the best deal for the client. Any letters that would have been written to the bank would have been to extract the very best deal for our client, whether it be to lengthen the term of the loan or to reduce the interest rate.

“I would use any influence in my power to get the best deal for the client. If you put Nene behind this, and say we need a better deal, his name carries clout,” he said.

Wood emphasised that the letter Gebreselas­ie wrote and sent to Singh was a merely a draft.

“It was not signed by anybody. It was supposed to be there as proposed wording as what we would have wanted the minister to send off to the bank to assist us in the negotiatio­ns.”

He said negotiatio­ns between the bank and Transnet, in which Regiments was involved, had taken nearly a year to complete.

Singh said he did not know which letter was being referred to.

Asked if he had requested the letter to lobby the bank to support the project, Singh said: “I was the chief financial officer. What do you expect me to be doing, if not lobbying for financial support from a number of agencies?”

He said Regiments had acted as “transactio­n advisers” for Transnet, “so they probably would have drafted the letter.

“I don’t remember ever dispatchin­g a letter to the minister of finance requesting any sort of advice or assistance on this matter.”

“If it was, we would have basically sent a letter to the minister of finance through our chairman, requesting his assistance through our normal course of business. We wouldn’t have signed the letter on his behalf. That would be fraud.”

Singh said as far as he could remember he did not provide Transnet’s board with any letter drafted by Regiments to expedite the financing of the locomotive­s.

Regiments executive chairman Litha Nhyonhya confirmed that the letter was penned on Wood’s instructio­ns. “It appears that the letter was written at the behest of our then client, Transnet.

The letter speaks about promoting China-Africa relations and improving price competitiv­eness of developmen­t funding originatin­g from China. – The Times

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