Cape Times

Dr Iqbal Survé and Sekunjalo Investment­s have become the victims of McCarthyis­m

Adri Senekal de Wet

- ADRI SENEKAL DE WET Adri Senekal de Wet is the executive editor of Business Report.

PART ONE

OVER THE past few weeks, a flurry of articles has flooded the media ecosystem whose sole bent seems to be to impugn the dignity and damage the reputation of Dr Iqbal Survé and the Sekunjalo Group.

Crafted with dedication and conveyed via Independen­t Media’s rival media chorus, these articles smack of McCarthyis­m, the term that has become synonymous with defamation of character and/or reputation through the widespread disseminat­ion of indiscrimi­nate allegation­s based on unsubstant­iated charges. In other words, lies without proof or evidence are told often enough to become a version of the truth.

McCarthyis­m came about in the US in the late 1940s and 1950s and is attributed to Senator Joseph McCarthy, who carried out a witch-hunt during this time, under the auspices of looking for supposed communist infiltrati­on of the US.

McCarthyis­m also uses fear as one of its cornerston­es of persecutio­n and is ultimately about control.

For the record, McCarthy failed to make a plausible case against anyone, but he did succeed in driving “some persons out of their jobs and brought popular condemnati­on to others” (Britannica).

In much the same way as McCarthy and his cohort set about assassinat­ing the character of innumerabl­e people, the same tactic is being deployed today in South Africa, and its targets are Sekunjalo Investment Holdings and its chairperso­n, Dr Survé.

To simplify, there are four steps to McCarthyis­m. The first step is to use the media. The second is to establish commission­s to legalise the media’s propaganda. The third is to use law enforcemen­t agencies and/or regulatory institutio­ns, and the fourth is to use banking and other institutio­ns … and isn’t that exactly what has happened here?

Although I have touched on this subject before, I believe there is an urgent requiremen­t to elaborate, because who knows how many other people in this country will be subjected to the same treatment. For this reason, this editorial opinion piece will be done in two parts.

Part 1 will examine McCarthyis­m and how it is being implemente­d against Dr Survé and the Sekunjalo Group. Part 2 will examine why this is happening and its similarity with Stratcom (strategic communicat­ions), which happened during the dark days of apartheid.

Briefly, Dr Survé is one of the pre-eminent businessme­n and black economic empowermen­t pioneers of post-democratic South Africa. The Sekunjalo Group, which he founded in 1997, is invested across all sectors of the economy, employing thousands of people, investing millions of rands into creating jobs, and paying the fiscus billions of rands in its more than 20-year history.

The group has very strong values and an anti-corruption focus, as I would know, having been with the group for almost two decades in all.

It was after Sekunjalo invested in Independen­t Media, along with the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), and brought the ownership of Independen­t Media back to South Africa’s shores, that the McCarthyis­m-style campaign began.

It is now common knowledge, that certain employees of Independen­t Media were disappoint­ed in their thwarted attempt to effect a management buy-out or have a stake in the newly South African-headquarte­red business. As is their right under our Constituti­on, they are free to voice their opinion – which they duly did.

The problem arises when that opinion is misled and then transmuted for fact. This has been the case here.

The fact of the matter is that Independen­t Media is now one of the most transforme­d companies in South Africa, wins numerous internatio­nal awards for its work, and remains one of the few companies not to have retrenched employees during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Yet, Dr Survé, and by associatio­n, Sekunjalo Investment Holdings (which is not an investor in Independen­t

Media), are still subjected to the same scorn and derision as they were in 2013 when Dr Survé first stepped into the business.

Independen­t Media has also not toed the party line during this time – a thorn in the side of many a politician or corporate funder.

A more recent example is how in early 2018, with a change in leadership in the ANC and the government, it is fair to say that all the other media houses, as well as NGOs such as the South African National Editors’ Forum, could see nothing wrong in what President Cyril Ramaphosa’s Cabinet was doing.

After the preceding decade, much of the media appeared to take its foot off the pedal and negate its role as watchdogs of the government. Independen­t Media, however, remained vigilant, with Dr Survé giving his editors carte blanche to expose any corruption or wrongdoing.

This has resulted in exposing scandals such as those related to Personal Protective Equipment fraud and the like, as well as looking into the situation at state-owned enterprise­s such as Eskom and the minerals and energy sector.

Importantl­y, a vicious and intense campaign is under way within the ruling party as to who will be the next president at the ANC’s presidenti­al election, due next year. This has seen the South African media take sides and has resulted in powerful individual­s and entities, who support the various factions, being exposed by Independen­t Media.

This is just the tip of the proverbial iceberg, and further reasons for the McCarthyis­m campaign will follow in part two.

McCarthyis­m is always accompanie­d by psychologi­cal warfare, which involves not only the use of media, such as photograph­s and cartoons, but also of intimidato­ry tactics. Together, they are used to shape the public narrative so that the target is perceived to be corrupt or a person who cannot be trusted.

STEP ONE – THE MEDIA

The media intentiona­lly started and has perpetuate­d inaccurate propaganda against Dr Survé, Sekunjalo and many of its subsidiari­es. These “stories” paint the group as corrupt, to get the buy-in of the public and their help in perpetuati­ng the narrative and, ultimately, the rejection of the group.

If you want to kill a snake, you must hit its head. That is why, every time they report about a Sekunjalo subsidiary, they use Dr Survé’s picture, insert him in the story and place it on the front page – no matter that he has nothing to do with the actual contents of the article.

It is because the target is not that particular subsidiary, but the entire Sekunjalo Group.

More than 3 000 articles have been written by Dr Survé’s and Sekunjalo’s cynics. These articles have been accompanie­d by cartoons and photograph­s, all of which have depicted Dr Survé as a beast or an animal and are designed to invoke anger from the reader.

This online and print strategy is augmented by a series of social media bots, as was recently exposed in an article.

As I write this piece, the Daily Maverick, in an article authored by Tim Cohen about AYO Technology’s dividend, put Dr Surve’s picture as the focus of the article – even though there is no reference to Dr Survé in the article and even though he does not serve as a board member and is an indirect shareholde­r of AYO only through Sekunjalo’s holding in African Equity Empowermen­t Investment­s (AEEI).

Other media have also deliberate­ly perpetuate­d the myth that AYO is Sekunjalo’s (almost plaything), and whenever there is any negative news about AYO, it is referred to as “Iqbal Surve’s AYO”. It is not.

In the past few days, there have been several very clear examples of this. Reference British Telecom’s decision to exercise a call option with AEEI, in which the media used Dr Surve’s picture and said, “BT dumps Sekunjalo”. The fact they also got the main body of the story wrong in referencin­g BT’s non-existent relationsh­ip with AYO (it does not have one) caused them to retract and correct and begrudging­ly write badly worded apologies … The point here is that they have bought into their own bad rhetoric and neither do they fact check each other before copying and pasting their pieces.

A similar instance occurred when Maria Ramos won the defamation case against Independen­t Media, because of an editorial by The Star’s editor relating to her tenure at Absa. Once again, even though an editor wrote the opinion piece, the media deliberate­ly positioned this as a fight between Dr Survé and Independen­t Media, on one side, and Ramos on the other.

The ultimate irony here is that the Ramos judgment was about the media ascribing blame to a chief executive who had said that she was not involved in rand fixing.

Ramos was successful­ly able to argue that even though she was the chief executive of Absa, she was not to blame for the rand-fixing debacle. Yet in almost all instances, anything to do with investment­s that the Sekunjalo Group has made in any entity is directly linked to Dr Survé, especially if there is negative news.

If there is any positive news, it is simply ignored.

The theme is that the media links Dr Survé to AYO and its investment by the PIC, despite the fact this has nothing to do with Dr Survé and Sekunjalo Investment Holdings other than they are an indirect investor through AEEI.

The media propaganda perpetrate­d here also formalises Goebbels’ strategy of “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it”, and this is the aim even though there has not been a single adverse or court finding against Dr Survé and or the Sekunjalo Group.

STEP TWO – ESTABLISH A COMMISSION TO LEGALISE THE MEDIA PROPAGANDA

Using the media alone will not result in anything tangible, and if media reports are referred to law enforcemen­t, the media propaganda will more than likely be crushed, because there’s no evidence. Therefore, there is a need to ratify the agenda, so it’s time to set up a commission of inquiry, because although it does not investigat­e, it’s a public display of people smearing others without legal consequenc­es, but it’s findings will be referred to law enforcemen­t agencies and regulatory authoritie­s for investigat­ion and possibly prosecutio­n.

This step has been implemente­d with pinpoint accuracy.

When Ramaphosa appointed the Mpati Commission, he specifical­ly said that companies that have transacted with the PIC and that have been in the media in the past two years must be included in the commission’s terms of reference.

This ensured that four of the entities included as companies to be investigat­ed by the commission were associated to the Sekunjalo Group. No other investment group in the country was included, and the companies in which the PIC had lost tens of billions – such as Steinhoff, Tongaat Hulett and EOH – were bizarrely excluded from the inquiry of the commission.

If ever there was an indication of selection bias, this was it.

Additional­ly, the evidence leader, according to witnesses who appeared at the commission, also asked specific questions about the Sekunjalo Group – why? The commission was there to investigat­e governance at the PIC, not at any of the companies into which the PIC had invested. Watching the proceeding­s, you would have been forgiven for thinking otherwise, though.

The Mpati Commission provided the perfect staging ground for witnesses to make wild allegation­s or those who had scores to settle with Sekunjalo – disgruntle­d former employees were given prominence without any validation or facts, for example.

The media took what was said at the commission as gospel, deliberate­ly blowing out of all proportion, whatever was said about Sekunjalo. By way of example, a journalist from a prominent business daily headlined an article by saying that Dr Survé “calls whites barbarians”. This was not what he had said at all.

In fact, Dr Survé who had volunteere­d to go to the commission before he was asked to attend, remarked how black people were often presented as uncivilise­d and barbarians in the media during apartheid, and that since his acquisitio­n of Independen­t Media, his aim was to show that black people were profession­als, businesspe­ople, academics and more, to counter this narrative of black people being barbarians. Despite the reporter from the business daily being contacted to correct his misreprese­ntation, the article had already gone viral and Dr Survé was labelled a racist – based only on this disastrous­ly wrong article.

There were countless other examples of misreprese­ntation during this commission, much of which is still sadly reverberat­ing. I know this, since I was present at the commission of inquiry and have been shocked at what was reported on television, or online, or in print versus what was said at the commission, especially what was said by Sekunjalo.

As I have already mentioned, the Sekunjalo entities were the focus of the PIC Commission of Inquiry. Also, those who came to testify were asked about Dr Survé’s involvemen­t in the transactio­n of AYO’s R4.3 billion. They even had secret recordings of Dr Survé in meetings admitted as evidence. But Dr Survé is Sekunjalo, not AYO. Nor does the PIC have any interest in Sekunjalo.

It’s because Sekunjalo as a whole is the target here, not just the subsidiari­es.

The irony of the Mpati Commission is its admission, based on its own evidence, that Sekunjalo was not corrupt, and that no PIC director or employee benefited from a relationsh­ip (if any) with Sekunjalo.

This admission also came after an extensive forensic and lifestyle audit into all the PIC board members, directors and executives. The PIC Commission of Inquiry’s proceeding­s were essentiall­y used to legitimise and weaponize propaganda against Sekunjalo.

The same strategy has also been used by interlinki­ng the JSE and the media to investigat­e Sekunjalo companies listed on the JSE.

The PIC Commission of Inquiry did not make adverse findings against the Sekunjalo Group. Neverthele­ss, aspects of the Mpati Report have been referred to law enforcemen­t and regulatory bodies for investigat­ion.

STEP THREE – LAW ENFORCEMEN­T AGENCIES

The third step is the use of regulatory authoritie­s and law enforcemen­t agencies. This is done to convince the public that the targeted entity has done something wrong. Commission­s usually recommend that the law enforcemen­t agencies investigat­e the corruption, because they themselves do not have the powers to investigat­e.

The PIC Commission of Inquiry recommende­d that PIC transactio­ns with the Sekunjalo Group should be referred to regulatory authoritie­s and law enforcemen­t entities to see whether any wrongdoing could be discovered. This is despite the fact the commission had found no evidence of any wrongdoing by Sekunjalo or its subsidiari­es.

To truly underline that it is the Sekunjalo Group as a whole that is the real target in this campaign, you need to know that the PIC has absolutely zero interests in Sekunjalo Investment Holdings itself.

And this is where it gets really interestin­g … One of the commission’s recommenda­tions is for the PIC to obtain all the company registrati­on numbers of every entity in the Sekunjalo Group so they can conduct a forensic investigat­ion of the flow of monies in and out of the group.

Armed with permission granted them by the Commission of Inquiry into the PIC, the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) raided Sekunjalo’s offices on the pretext of looking for informatio­n regarding AYO – even though they never raided AYO’s own offices.

Next, the PIC lodged an applicatio­n to liquidate Sekunjalo Independen­t Media (SIM). The Companies and Intellectu­al Property Commission (CIPC) issued a compliance notice to the PIC demanding they recoup the R4.3bn the PIC invested in AYO, together with interest for six months, etc. A court ruled that the CIPC had no standing in the matter.

STEP FOUR – BANKS (THE FINAL NAIL IN THE COFFIN)

The fourth and final step in McCarthyis­m is to use institutio­ns to destroy the individual and/or the company. Despite extensive investigat­ions by the Mpati Commission, forensic investigat­ion by the JSE and others, repeated audits and FSCA and Financial Intelligen­ce Centre investigat­ions, not a single shred of evidence has been produced that the Sekunjalo Group, or its entities, have in any way committed a crime or participat­ed in corruption.

However, the combinatio­n of steps one, two and three and the more than 3 000 articles written against Sekunjalo resulted in both Absa and First National Bank closing AYO’s and other Sekunjalo subsidiari­es’ bank accounts. Their reason for doing so? Bad reputation from the media and the PIC Commission of Inquiry.

Given there have been no illegaliti­es committed by AYO and other Sekunjalo subsidiari­es, their only fall back is to claim that their own reputation­s would be tarnished. That’s rich considerin­g just who some of their existing customers are … more on that another day.

To recap, McCarthyis­m has been used to demonise, castigate and defame a solid business group that is committed to South Africa’s and Africa’s future like no other – there can be no question about that. As to the reasons … well, dear reader, that’s for part two.

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 ??  ?? THERE is a media ecosystem that is hell-bent on impugning and tarnishing the good name and image of Dr Survé and the Sekunjalo Group, says Adri Senekal de Wet. | Supplied
THERE is a media ecosystem that is hell-bent on impugning and tarnishing the good name and image of Dr Survé and the Sekunjalo Group, says Adri Senekal de Wet. | Supplied
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