The Voice (Botswana)

ON THE MONEY TRAIL

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The former Director of Petroleum Installati­on (PTY) Ltd, Eric van Den Berg, has vowed to fight to the bitter end in a effort to recover his lost money.

In the late 80s and early 90s, Den Berg ran a successful company commission­ed to build and service filling stations across the length and breadth of Botswana.

The 60-year-old South African claims in the following years he bought a fleet of at least 24 cars through Wesbank, a division of FNBB.

However, in 2007, he suffered a heart attack and was in a coma for three months. When he woke up, he had lost his memory.

Den Berg blames the bank for his heart attack and believes the bulk of his property attached and auctioned should never have been sold.

“Most of my stuff was fully paid. Bank statements also show that the bank overcharge­d me by at least P1.7 million on car repayments. How do you auction property of a man who’s in a coma? This is fraud and it needs to be investigat­ed,” he insisted angrily.

To support this assertion, Den Berg has shown The Voice a 2004 notice of motion ordering the Deputy Sheriff to attach and return to FNBB a 2000 Mercedez Benz S320, registrati­on number B 233 AHF, which at the time attracted a monthly installmen­t of P7, 779.

The confusion, according to Den Berg, is while the Deputy Sherrif attached his S320, which he maintains was fully paid for, the bank gave court the impression that the car in question was a 2002 Mercedez Benz C240 Elegance which confusingl­y bore the same B 233 AHF numberplat­e.

“They knew exactly what they were doing. They gave court an impression that the car in dispute was of a lesser value, and then they went on and auctioned off a more valuable car which was fully paid for,” stated Den Berg.

He further claims that after his memory returned, he highlighte­d these anomalies to the bank management through his then lawyer, Bernard Bolele, and the bank showed a willingnes­s to settle out of court for P2 million.

Bolele, however, tells a slightly different version of the story.

“FNBB never put anything on the table. In fact, what I heard was that some low level Managers at Wesbank were the ones who had proposed a settlement. As his lawyer at the time, I’d have advised him to take the out of court settlement because he was really struggling,” the former Mahalapye West Member of Parliament told The Voice.

Additional­ly, responding to a questionna­ire sent by The Voice, Wesbank Director, Basiame Kgopodiso, confirmed that Den Berg was indeed a client but denied ever defrauding him.

“We can confirm that an investigat­ion was carried out by FNB Botswana and simultaneo­usly by law enforcemen­t agencies being the Botswana Police Service and Serious Crime Unit. The investigat­ions concluded that there was no evidence and or grounds of any wrong doing on the Bank’s part. Accordingl­y, the findings of the investigat­ion exonerated the Bank of any liability in respect of the client’s claims against the Bank,” she said.

Undeterred, Den Berg told The Voice he intends to engage the Banking Adjudicato­r and the Financial Intelligen­ce Agency to help him recover his alleged lost millions.

 ??  ?? CHASING MONEY:
Eric van Den Berg
CHASING MONEY: Eric van Den Berg

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