Cape Times

Retraction in respect of Karan Beef

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ON DECEMBER 9, 2019, Business Report published an article titled “Editor’s Note: Khoza brings great expectatio­ns to PIC” by Adri Senekal de Wet, referring to the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC) and Karan Beef.

Several references were made therein to Karan Beef. We, hereby, retract the references to Karan Beef and have published this retraction across all of our digital platforms.

Below is an edited version of the original article:

I WAS pleasantly surprised when Finance Minister Tito Mboweni appointed veteran businesspe­rson Dr Reuel Khoza as the interim chairperso­n of the PIC in 2019. Khoza boasts an impressive track record of leadership positions in South Africa’s private and public sectors. He has previously served as board chairperso­n at the Nedbank Group, Globeleq, and GlaxoSmith­Kline, among others.

Khoza has held directorsh­ips at the JSE, IBM South Africa, the Liberty Life Group, the Standard Bank Group, Nampak as well as Old Mutual, and was formerly the president of the Institute of Directors in South Africa. He is also currently the chairperso­n of blackowned investment holding company Dzana Investment­s and AKA Capital.

Khoza also played a role in developing the King Codes, which govern corporate governance, serving as Mervyn

King’s deputy in the formulatio­n of the King III and King IV Codes. This astute businessma­n describes himself as a thought leader, an Africanist, a public speaker and a lyricist.

I wish Khoza all the best as he takes on the rather daunting task of steering the PIC vessel in the right direction and to restore confidence in the asset manager. Having said that, one cannot ignore the move by the PIC to apply for the liquidatio­n applicatio­n against Sekunjalo Independen­t Media (SIM), which I feel is an assault on media freedom and the transforma­tion of South Africa’s media landscape.

I fully agree with the various politician­s, business leaders and labour organisati­ons who have publicly stated their concerns on the PIC’s move. There is more to this liquidatio­n applicatio­n than meets the eye.

As ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule recently pointed out, one of the principles that always needs to be held sacrosanct is freedom of speech. “This is best described by what Evelyn Beatrice Hall wrote in The Friends of Voltaire: ‘I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.’ This means that I may not like what you say, but I am obliged to hear you out. I have watched with increasing alarm the events unfolding with regards to (SIM) and the PIC,” he said.

The public at large is by now fully aware of the billions that the PIC lost by investing in loss-making public companies. Shocking is that most of these companies are accused of fraudulent transactio­ns.

Now, why does the PIC only apply for the liquidatio­n of Sekunjalo-related companies?

At no point were any of these companies involved in any fraudulent transactio­ns whatsoever. There are a number of investment­s made by the PIC that have gone under, but we don’t see such brouhaha around those other losses.

Take Erin Energy for instance, which eventually filed for bankruptcy in 2018. The asset manager lost about $333 million (R4.86 billion, at the current exchange rate) on the Erin Energy investment – $270m in the initial investment and an additional $67m it had to pay on Erin Energy’s behalf to the guarantor of a $100m loan from Mauritius Commercial Bank, the inquiry heard. The PIC also suffered a R1.8bn whammy after it bought Cyril Ramaphosa’s company out of MTN Nigeria.

I received various messages from several business leaders over the last couple of days, asking me to follow up on, as they call it, “the witch hunt” against SIM and related companies.

I will gladly share these with you, Dr Khoza, in person.

My thoughts are: Where is the legal action and liquidatio­n of Steinhoff since the widely reported collapse and accounting irregulari­ties exposed by the PIC report? Where is their legal action and liquidatio­n of companies that have collapsed over 60 percent share value due to reported fraud and irregulari­ties, ie Tongaat et al? Where is the list of all the companies with debt against the PIC – and are they all servicing the debt? Are those who are not servicing the debt also facing legal action?

SIM-related companies are alive and keeping thousands of people employed, yet somehow they are the ones targeted to be brought to their knees by Africa’s largest asset manager, which is tasked with, among other things, promoting transforma­tion. The natural course of action that an investor would take is to put mechanisms in place to save the investment – especially during such times where unemployme­nt in South Africa is at its worst – rather than go all out to destroy it.

Hence I have high hopes that Khoza, an astute businesspe­rson, thought leader, and Africanist, will rise to the occasion and apply his wealth of experience to champion the transforma­tion drive, save people’s jobs, and ultimately save the asset manager’s valuable investment.

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