Times of Eswatini

Eskom’s legal boss ‘questioned’ De Ruyter’s firing

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JOHANNESBU­RG - Eskom’s group executive responsibl­e for legal affairs and compliance Mel Govender said she questioned the company’s fairness in terminatin­g former CEO André de Ruyter’s employment after his explosive interview with eNCA in February.

Govender said she was told one of the grounds for De Ruyter’s immediate dismissal was that he had brought the organisati­on into disrepute. She questioned this because in her view, there was that nothing in the interview that brought Eskom into disrepute.

Govender told Parliament’s standing committee on public accounts (SCOPA) on Tuesday that issues De Ruyter addressed in the interview with Annika

Larsen regarding coal theft, criminal conduct in Mpumalanga, the bottleneck­s within Eskom and resistance by Eskom employees were not new to Eskom.

“Maybe the detail regarding the mafias and the level of criminalit­y taking place (was new), but even then she did not see how it brought the company into disrepute, she said.

“I questioned the fairness, I questioned what was actually said that has brought Eskom into disrepute because the risks that had been highlighte­d were not news to Eskom, and so I questioned what exactly has brought the organisati­on into disrepute.

“I also questioned the manner in which it was implemente­d, it happened very fast and perhaps in hindsight, it could have taken a while longer,” she said.

‘‘Taking longer could have helped Eskom to get a copy of report and ensure a proper handover for the new CEO, among other things,’’ she said.

“I think the fastness led to decisions that we are now paying for, so perhaps if a different approach was followed, we’d have a copy of the report by now and working on that instead.”

Govender’s other concern related to how Eskom employees would view De Ruyter’s ‘very quick exit which was literally overnight’ and whether it would impact on the attempts to get buy-in from them in terms of using a whistle-blower hotline and other mechanisms put in place in the fight against fraud and corruption. It could have been

perceived as an ‘if I raise these types of issues am I now going to be targeted’.

She said she was not consulted for legal advice before De Ruyter’s immediate dismissal. The opportunit­y to review De Ruyter’s interview with eNCA only came after his departure from Eskom.

Govender said she did not think Eskom and parliament should be pursuing De Ruyter, instead they should focus on recovering losses and improving governance controls. While there was a breach of process, she struggled to accept this brought the company into disrepute, she said.

“That is not where we should be focusing our attention from a legal perspectiv­e, I am not saying there is no legal claim to be made, we have considered this and based on the facts that we have, it actually serves no purpose to pursue this legal avenue”.

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