Cape Argus

Sekunjalo contract is ‘fishy’, says DA

Consortium has ‘conflict of interest’, tender exposes ‘significan­t irregulari­ties’

- SUE SEGAR

THE DA has called on Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Tina Joemat-pettersson to immediatel­y put the brakes on what it believes is a “fishy” tender for a contract – valued at nearly R1 billion – to combat illegal fishing along SA coastlines.

The tender was awarded late last year to a consortium headed up by black empowermen­t firm Sekunjalo, which has long-establishe­d links to the government.

The DA call came after the party gained access to a forensic audit into the Sekunjalo tender, which was conducted by Pricewater­housecoope­rs and completed in October.

Joemat-pettersson announced the five-year deal with the Sekunjalo-led consortium in November, despite the fact that a due diligence process had not been concluded.

DA spokesman on Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries, Pieter van Dalen, said the report exposed significan­t irregulari­ties in how the contract was awarded.

“The contract was awarded even though a Sekunjalo subsidiary, Premier Fishing, has fishing rights for SA waters – a clear conflict of interest.

“Sekunjalo has effectivel­y entered into an R800 million contract with the state to be both the player and referee in South African waters,” he said.

SA has a R2bn-a-year fishing industry.

Premier Fishing has interests in a number of fisheries.

Sekunjalo chairman Iqbal Survé, who is also a director of Premier Fishing, reportedly travels abroad regularly as part of business delegation­s accompanyi­ng President Jacob Zuma and government ministers.

The audit raised questions about the objectivit­y and voting behaviour of at least two members of the evaluation committee tasked with scoring the various tender applicants.

It also recommende­d that the conflict of interest be investigat­ed by the Marine Living Resources Fund, which finances the operations of Marine and Coastal management. This was never done.

Van Dalen yesterday called on Joemat-pettersson to show her commitment to good governance by opening the process followed in awarding the tender to public scrutiny.

He said he would write to her urging her to release the report and declare the tender process invalid.

The key findings of the forensic report in the DA’S possession are:

There was no evidence that the bid adjudicati­on committee even considered the major conflict of interest in awarding a contract to Sekunjalo. The qualificat­ions of the people on the committee also could not be verified.

The report acknowledg­es the apparent conflict of interest, repeatedly raised by the DA and other stakeholde­rs. Premier Fishing, as a subsidiary of the Sekunjalo Consortium, has existing fishing rights awarded to it by the state.

Premier Fishing, Premier Fishing Consortium and Sekunjalo Marine Services all submitted bids for the same tender, citing one common annual report as their supporting documentat­ion.

Van Dalen submitted a PAIA applicatio­n to see the tender documentat­ion referred to in the audit report and the DA has submitted parliament­ary questions on the matter.

“It is becoming increasing­ly apparent that the fisheries branch of the Department of Agricultur­e and Minister Joemat-pettersson have acted in a way that puts our marine resources, and the people who make their livelihood­s out of it, at risk,” said Van Dalen.

The Department spokespers­ons could not be reached for comment.

In December, Smit Amandla, the local subsidiary of the Dutch-based multinatio­nal ship-handling group Smit, served a notice of motion on the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries seeking to interdict it from awarding the tender to a consortium led by Sekunjalo. Smit Amandla has operated the tender to manage and maintain the country’s marine research and fisheries patrol vessels for the past 10 years and was unsuccessf­ul in its bid to have it extended for a further five years.

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