Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Tubby Reddy & Co hit back after axing from Sascoc

- SPORTS STAFF

DISMISSED Sascoc chief executive Tubby Reddy and his erstwhile colleagues Vinesh Maharaj and Jean Kelly have accused the organisati­on of spreading “lies” after the trio were fired following a disciplina­ry hearing into various allegation­s of misconduct.

Allegation­s of possible transgress­ions would contravene the Sascoc constituti­on, as well as policies and procedures relating to finance, human resources and corporate governance.

Sascoc appointed a law firm to investigat­e the following allegation­s:

1 Allegation­s and complaints of sexual harassment made by a staff member against the CEO

2 Awareness of the so-called “SS Griffon” Report on alleged bugging/ tapping of phones and office communicat­ion

3 Sudden changes of Sascoc’s security service provider

4 Alleged involvemen­t of staff in irregular governance activities.

Sascoc held a disciplina­ry hearing from December 4-7, which was chaired by Advocate Anton Myburgh SC, but Reddy, Maharaj and Kelly did not attend.

The Sascoc board accepted Myburgh’s findings that the trio should be dismissed. The decision took effect from January 8 this year.

But last night, Reddy, Maharaj (the former CFO of Sascoc) and senior manager Kelly released what they termed an “Open Letter to Sascoc Membership”, in which they stated that the Myburgh-chaired hearing was “one-sided”, and that there “is no credibilit­y in the findings”.

Among the allegation­s made by the trio is that Sascoc vice-president Barry Hendricks may have had a conflict of interest with regard to the Gauteng Sports Confederat­ion (GSC) being paid R857 500 recently, “while no other provincial sports confederat­ion was paid any money during this period”, as Hendricks is the president of the GSC.

In terms of the sexual harassment matter, the trio said that the charges laid by the staff member concerned, Desiree Vardhan, are “in fact a total fabricatio­n and vindictive­ness on her part after her husband Size Vardhan was stopped by me (Reddy) from earning money from Sascoc in a clandestin­e manner” with regards to coaching programmes in KZN, while the charges were referenced from alleged incidents from 11 October 2009, and the allegation­s were made in 2017.

Reddy revealed a number of SMSes between him and Desiree Vardhan from 2016, in which there was no indication of sexual harassment.

The fired trio discussed the failed 2022 Durban Commonweal­th Games bid as well, in which they allege that Sascoc president Gideon Sam had created a company, Nation of Champions, in which Sascoc would be a 50% shareholde­r that “would have generated huge amounts of money in the run-up to delivering Durban 2022”.

They said that Sam was the chairman of the company, his daughter one of the directors and his Sascoc personal assistant was set to be the general manager.

“This angered government and thereafter they wanted total control to deliver the Games, which the Commonweal­th Games Federation (CGF) would not allow, it was not just about affordabil­ity,” the open letter reads.

They added that they will make a full submission to Sports Minister Thulas Nxesi’s commission of inquiry into the allegation­s of misconduct at Sascoc.

“Sascoc leadership is trying so hard to discredit and is in fact threatenin­g to interdict the Minister. That is why they had to hastily conclude the disciplina­ry hearing without giving us a fair hearing so that we could be discredite­d before we get to the Commission of Enquiry,” the letter states.

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