Cape Argus

SA Post Office’s days numbered

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IF THE Post Office’s debt, its failure to pay medical aid and pension funds, as well as the bailout snub by Treasury, hints at the state-owned company’s downfall, and comments by the company’s CEO Nomkhitha Mona all but confirm workers’ worst fears.

In addition, a presentati­on titled Day Zero has emerged, suggesting the SOE is preparing for its doomsday.

The Cape Argus has heard a recording of Mona, saying: “I think colleagues, as things stand right now, the reality is Sapo cannot afford to operate.”

She said the Post Office can’t afford workers’ outstandin­g back pay, medical aid and the pension fund “because we’re sitting with R9 million in the bank account as of today”.

“I even indicated (earlier in the meeting) that if we were a normal entity, the company would be closing down. That’s the reality. Whether it comes to whether it’s business rescue or administra­tion, we have written to DCDT (Department of Communicat­ions and Digital Technologi­es) to say without financial injection to keep us going, we won’t be able to continue (operating).”

She said the funds promised to the Post Office had not materialis­ed.

The recording emerged a few days after the Auditor-General (A-G) Tsakani Maluleke’s office’s presentati­on about Sapo to Parliament, in which A-G officials said the Post Office racked up losses of R2.2 billion and R6.5bn in liabilitie­s in 2021/22.

DA MP Dianne Kohler-Barnard told the Cape Argus that staff members had their medical aid suspended by Medipos when the Post Office failed to settle a R700m debt.

Kohler-Barnard, who sits on the communicat­ions and digital technologi­es portfolio committee, said: “Sapo owes its creditors R4.3bn. They’ve already received a massive bailout of R6bn before.”

This comes as SA Post Office union bosses hint at a strike.

Approached for comment, Post Office spokespers­on Johan Kruger said: “It is Post Office policy not to discuss internal matters with the media.”

Communicat­ion Workers’ Union general-secretary Aubrey Tshabalala recently told the Cape Argus the union was waiting for a certificat­e from the Commission for Conciliati­on, Mediation and Arbitratio­n to strike over wages and other issues.

Requests and reminders for an interview with Tshabalala proved fruitless. |

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