Cape Times

Satawu demands a meeting with transport minister

- Banele Ginindza

THE SOUTH African Transport and Allied Workers Union (Satawu) yesterday demanded an audience with the Minister for Transport and the Transnet board to explain what it considers kneejerk political purges in state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) as news broke on the suspension of Transnet chief executive Siyabonga Gama and two executives.

Satawu’s executive co-ordinator Jack Mazi- buko said yesterday: “We are not defending individual­s here, but we are concerned that the investigat­ions are being conducted for the sake of being conducted.

“Why the haste to suspend (Gama) when there are still investigat­ions being done?”

He said the inconclusi­ve investigat­ions at SOEs were often detrimenta­l to workers who then struggled to get their incentives payments. He said Satawu was acting on having a meeting with the Minister for Transport and the Transnet board to ensure transparen­cy and the protection of workers.

In a statement yesterday, Transnet board chairperso­n Popo Molefe said Gama, engineerin­g chief executive Thamsanqa Jiyane and executive manager Lindiwe Mdletshe had been served with letters of intention to place them on precaution­ary suspension.

He said there were specific transgress­ions unearthed by Werksmans Attorneys, Mncedisi Ndlovu & Sedumedi Attorneys and Fundudzi Forensic Investigat­ors as well as recommenda­tions for further investigat­ions to be conducted to establish the extent of the misconduct.

Gama is being further probed for allegation­s that he wrongfully obtained his MBA with the help of a service provider to Transnet, McKinsey.

The three Transnet executives have until Monday’s close of business to make written submission­s on why they should not be suspended.

Mazibuko said similar investigat­ions were still on-going at the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa as well as SAA, where people were implicated, but no conclusion­s made, leaving workers and their incentives in a lurch.

An analyst at Candor Governance, Gerrit van der Merwe, said South Africa’s Companies Act, the Public Finance Management Act, procuremen­t regulation­s and King IV adequately equip boards to lead organisati­ons.

“All we are witnessing now is the proper applicatio­n of compliance blended with ethical leadership.

“All we are witnessing is the leadership our country was thirsting for,” Van der Merwe said.

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/ANA ?? Transnet chief executive Siyabonga Gama has been provisiona­lly suspended.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI/ANA Transnet chief executive Siyabonga Gama has been provisiona­lly suspended.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa