The Mercury

Fedusa welcomes appointmen­t of commission to probe PIC

Allegation­s by anonymous “whistle-blowers” regularly find traction in certain media

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THE FEDERATION of Unions of South Africa (Fedusa) welcomes the appointmen­t by President Cyril Ramaphosa of a Commission of Inquiry into allegation­s of impropriet­y at the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) and supports the six-month period to complete the investigat­ion.

Fedusa is concerned about persistent political intrusion in the operations of the PIC by politician­s, who advance questionab­le allegation­s against the biggest asset manager in Africa with a combined portfolio of more than R2 trillion in government pension and other funds.

Fedusa has called for the appointmen­t of independen­t non-executive worker directors to serve on the PIC Board in order to strengthen corporate governance, to promote representa­tion from organised labour and to combat any forms of impropriet­y and attempts to wrongfully influence investment decisions.

The terms of reference of the commission mandate the former president of the Supreme Court of Appeal, Justice Lex Mpati, the former Reserve Bank governor Gill Marcus, and veteran asset manager Emmanuel Lediga to investigat­e whether any alleged impropriet­y in investment decisions by the PIC in media reports in 2017 and 2018 contravene­d any legislatio­n.

Fedusa remains concerned that repeated allegation­s by anonymous individual­s posing as “whistle-blowers” regularly find traction in certain media organisati­ons, including claims of a romantic relationsh­ip between Dr Daniel Matjila, the PIC chief executive, and Pretty Louw, a businesswo­man.

An investigat­ion by Advocate Geoff Budlender SC, that was commission­ed by the PIC board earlier this year, has now found that no evidence could be placed before it to prove this, and a multitude of other allegation­s, against Matjila.

Yet, the media campaign rolls on with headlines like “Matjila’s days are numbered as anti-corruption drive heats up ‘PIC has been named three times in ten days in politicall­y tainted scandals’.”

Another headline on July 23, 2018, stated that “Nene to announce Matjila’s fate before the weekend”. A further interestin­g headline, published in the Sunday Times on July 27, was “PIC staff want bosses suspended to be free to speak out on corruption”.

These headlines clearly feed off internal, confidenti­al company informatio­n, including the deliberati­ons of the PIC board that is selectivel­y leaked to journalist­s who appear to be willing recipients and participan­ts in a campaign to destabilis­e the PIC.

The methodolog­y of using a media campaign to introduce false or distorted informatio­n into the public domain is the same approach that was used to advance the capturing of crucial state institutio­ns such as the Hawks, Ipid and SA Revenue Service (Sars).

We have seen how allegation­s of an unlawful “rogue unit” that existed in Sars are still repeated to this day, despite an overwhelmi­ng body of evidence in the public domain that shows how this was used to effectivel­y destroy the tax-collecting agency.

Internatio­nal firms like KPMG were then appointed by suspended Sars commission­er Tom Moyane to investigat­e these allegation­s and to lend credibilit­y to the unlawful rogue unit allegation­s.

Judge Robert Nugent’s Commission of Inquiry into Sars has now recommende­d that the president take steps without delay to remove Moyane as Sars commission­er and recommende­d that the president should take steps without delay to appoint a new commission­er of Sars.

Judge Nugent has also rejected allegation­s that a “rogue unit” was unlawfully establishe­d at Sars.

The first point in the terms of reference of the inquiry into the PIC focuses on the role of the media.

Whether any alleged impropriet­y regarding investment decisions by the PIC in media reports in 2017 and 2018 contravene­d any legislatio­n, PIC policy or contractua­l obligation­s and resulted in any undue benefit for any PIC director, or employee or any associate or family member of any PIC director or employee at the time.

In view of the conduct of some journalist­s over this period in their reporting on the PIC, Fedusa must caution media institutio­ns to guard against publishing distorted informatio­n and untested allegation­s from anonymous sources, as fact. The PIC’s role in our economy is crucial in many respects and we cannot allow the work of this important institutio­n to be undermined for nefarious means.

Dennis George is the general secretary of Fedusa.

TRUMP SCARES PANTS OFF EBAY

AMERICAN shoppers might have to kiss goodbye to the $1 yoga pants deals with free shipping from Chinese sellers that have sprung up on eBay and other e-shopping platforms after the latest salvo in President Donald Trump’s trade war. Trump’s ordering of the US Postal Service to withdraw from an obscure 192-nation postal treaty threatens to hit American shoppers used to bargains on platforms such as eBay and Amazon. com, where thousands of listings from sellers based in China hawking dirt-cheap consumer goods will likely disappear. The treaty, which sets fees that national postal services charge to deliver mail and small packages from other countries, gives poor and developing markets lower shipping rates than developed nations. The agreement – and another one building on it signed between the US and China postal services in 2011 – has essentiall­y given Chinese merchants a $170 million (R2.43bn) annual subsidy to ship products directly to US homes. “Chinese sellers on eBay and other platforms may disappear,” said Gary Huang, chairperso­n of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai’s supply chain committee. Bloomberg

 ?? DEAN HUTTON ?? DANIEL Matjila, the chief executive of the Public Investment Corporatio­n, has been the victim of media innuendo which was spread by anonymous individual­s posing as “whistle-blowers”. | Bloomberg
DEAN HUTTON DANIEL Matjila, the chief executive of the Public Investment Corporatio­n, has been the victim of media innuendo which was spread by anonymous individual­s posing as “whistle-blowers”. | Bloomberg
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