The Star Early Edition

Fireco Gauteng to pay R1m fine

- Roy Cokyane

A SETTLEMENT agreement between fire control and protection services provider Fireco Gauteng, now named KRS Fire, and the Competitio­n Commission in terms of which Fireco Gauteng agreed to pay a fine of R909 376.29 for collusion has been confirmed by the Competitio­n Tribunal.

The tribunal said yesterday that an addendum to the consent agreement with Fireco Gauteng, which addressed a concern about the wording of the consent agreement that the tribunal had raised during a hearing of the case earlier this month, was made an order of the tribunal.

It had expressed concern about the wording of the consent agreement because it meant that Fireco Gauteng’s conditiona­l leniency in respect of market allocation was granted rather than being conditiona­l on it co-operating with the commission in the prosecutio­n of the other members of the cartel. It is the second settlement confirmed by the tribunal.

The tribunal earlier this month confirmed a settlement agreement in terms of which Afrion Property Services cc (Afrion), which is also specialisi­ng in supplying, installing and maintainin­g fire control and protection systems in South Africa and the continent, agreed to pay a fine of R327 201.85 for collusion with Independen­t Fire Protection Services, which has since ceased operating.

The other companies referred to the tribunal in March for prosecutio­n were Belfa Fire, Cross Fire Management, Fire Protection Systems, Fireco, and Tshwane Fire Sprinklers cc.

The referral followed the search and seizure dawn raid by commission investigat­ors in March 2015 on the offices of six Gauteng based firms as part of an investigat­ion into alleged collusive conduct. This included the installati­on and maintenanc­e of automatic sprinkler systems, hydrants, hose reels and extinguish­ers.

Sipho Ngwema, a spokespers­on for the commission, said in March when the cases were referred to the tribunal that the commission’s investigat­ion found that from at least 1996 to 2015 the companies entered into agreements and/or engaged in a concerted practice to fix prices, divide markets and tendered collusivel­y.

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