Cape Times

SA’S FALSE PRIVATISAT­ION

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True privatisat­ion requires that the major shareholde­r is independen­t politicall­y and ideologica­lly of Government. The SAA deal announced by minister Pravin Gordhan falls 100 percent short of those criteria. The Takatso Consortium which is to have a 51% holding in SAA comprises two groups: Harith General Partners and Global Aviation. The chairman of Harith, Jabu Moleketi, was deputy Finance minister in Thabo Mbeki’s cabinet.

His wife, Geraldine Fraser was also a Cabinet minister. So, not only is half the Takatso Consortium ANC-aligned, but the chairman of Takatso Consortium, Tshepo Mahloele, is similarly aligned having previously headed the corporate finance and Isibaya division of the state-owned Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC). The main shareholde­r in Harith is the PIC. So the R3 billion that Harith is putting into the Consortium is actually from the PIC and amounts to a loan from a state company to one of its progeny. Put another way, the givers and the receivers are the same people.

The deal is being hailed as a public/ private partnershi­p.

The final proof that the SAA has not been privatised is the 33% Golden share in voting rights which the state has in the deal. Although ostensibly the minority shareholde­r in the partnershi­p with 49%. So the ANC government has given nothing away and remained true to its ideologica­l conviction that privatisat­ion is taboo. DUNCAN DU BOIS

Bluff, Durban

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