Gigaba dismisses reports on use of pension funds to bail out SOEs
FINANCE Minister Malusi Gigaba has poured cold water over reports that national Treasury wants to use R100-billion of the funds in the Public Investment Corporation (PIC) to bail out state-owned enterprises.
The PIC oversees the biggest fund in Africa‚ managing about R1.9-trillion in assets mainly belonging to the Government Employees Pension Fund.
PIC chief executive Dan Matjila told Business Times that certain people wanted him removed so that they could have easier access to the R1.9-trillion the PIC controlled.
Four weeks ago he rejected a request for a R6-billion loan for SAA from the chairwoman‚ Dudu Myeni‚ a close friend of President Jacob Zuma.
“For me the motivation is clear. To try and remove me‚” he said. “I’ve got the keys. They’re looking for the keys to the big safe.”
He claimed that his refusal to authorise certain transactions had upset “politically connected people”.
Gigaba said yesterday that reports circulating about the PIC being raided were not true. “No formal or informal request has been sent to the PIC for such funds‚” he said.
“Such untrue reports deviate attention from what is important – finding a long-term solution that will ensure that SOEs continue to contribute to our economic development without being a burden on the fiscus.”
The DA said at the weekend that reports about a bailout for struggling state-owned enterprises‚ including R12-billion for South African Airways (SAA)‚ were disturbing.
DA deputy spokesman on finance Alf Lees said it was “deeply concerning that there is also allegedly a plot to remove the PIC’s chief executive, Dan Matjila‚ which was reportedly a greedy attempt by the Guptas to hijack the PIC and loot from the people of our country”. – TimesLIVE