Cape Times

The Rand manipulati­on is showing that corruption has hit complex levels

- TAWANDA KAROMBO

MANIPULATI­ON of the rand by local and internatio­nal banks indicate that corruption had hit complex and multifacet­ed levels in South Africa as it involved public and private spheres though well-knitted networks that required a dedicated anti-corruption agency to unravel, Corruption Watch said yesterday.

Some banks, including Standard Chartered, singled out by the Competitio­n Commission, have already admitted colluding to fixing the rand between 2007 and 2013 and paid fines. However, others are digging in, saying they were not involved in rand manipulati­on.

The Competitio­n Commission is now appealing at the South African Constituti­onal Court against the Competitio­n Appeal Court's (CAC's)judgment, which upheld the appeal by the majority of the respondent banks accused of price-fixing and division of markets in contravent­ion of the Competitio­n Act.

“The CAC order, therefore, released 17 respondent banks from the complaint referral before they answered the allegation­s against them and restricted the commission's case to only four respondent banks. “In its current applicatio­n for leave to appeal, the commission is appealing the CAC order to the Constituti­onal Court against 13 respondent banks,” said the Competitio­n Commission in a statement on Tuesday.

These banks include Standard Bank, Nomura Internatio­nal, and JPMorgan Chase Bank, among others.

The commission is, however, not appealing against the CAC order in respect of the Nedbank Group Limited, FirstRand Limited, Credit Suisse Group, and Standard New York Securities Inc.

Zwelinzima Vavi, the general secretary of South African Federation of Trade Unions, said yesterday that the union supported the Competitio­n Commission's appeal to the Constituti­onal Court in its bid “to hold the local and internatio­nal banks accountabl­e for the rand/ dollar manipulati­on” over the period in question.

Corruption Watch's stakeholde­r relations and campaigns lead, Melusi Ncala, told Business Report by phone yesterday that the rand manipulati­on saga was a mirror of the multifacet­ed nature of corruption in South Africa. “Rand manipulati­on basically indicates that corruption is indeed a quite complex issue. It's multifacet­ed. It involves networks,” said Ncala.

Worse still, corruption, as exposed by the admittance of guilt by some of the banks that were involved in the manipulati­on of the rand “can be quite opaque”, hence, there is need for stern efforts and action to deal with it.

“There needs to be a concerted effort in dealing with it. If anything, we need a dedicated anti-corruption agency that can look into ongoing occurrence­s of corruption, such as these ones (rand manipulati­on) to support work done by the Competitio­n Commission and other institutio­ns.” Corruption Watch said it was “good for the Competitio­n Commission to satisfy itself, given the importance of this matter” by taking the CAC order to the Constituti­onal Court.

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