Daily Dispatch

Prasa board sent packing by public accounts experts

- By BIANCA CAPAZORIO

THE Passenger Rail Authority of South Africa’s (Prasa) board were sent packing by parliament’s select committee on public accounts (Scopa) after they failed to adequately answer their questions about the procuremen­t of new locomotive­s.

Members of parliament’s watchdog committee asked several questions around the tender for the locomotive­s, the pricing and the R357-million contract marked as irregular expenditur­e by the auditor-general.

The procuremen­t of the locomotive­s, named the Afro4000, caused a scandal when it was found they were the wrong size for the South African rail infrastruc­ture.

It later emerged the company’s chief engineer, David Mtimkulu, had faked his qualificat­ions.

Chairman of the board of Prasa Popo Molefe and his team could only respond that these and several other issues around the tender were still under investigat­ion by Prasa.

The organisati­on launched an investigat­ion into several irregular aspects concerning the tender, with the national treasury, forensic and IT specialist­s being called in to assist in determinin­g exactly what went wrong.

Molefe also said that the three responsibl­e for the problems – former CEO Lucky Montana, the company’s chief procuremen­t officer and “the so-called” Dr Mtimkulu – had since left the employ of Prasa.

He said it appeared, from informatio­n available so far, that currency hedging had been responsibl­e for the increase in the cost of locomotive­s acquired.

He said the Rand/Euro exchange had differed between signing the contract and delivery, forcing Prasa to cut the number of locomotive­s acquired from 88 to 70.

Additional­ly, it appeared Montana and his team changed the requiremen­t from the Euro3000 locomotive to the Euro4000 (subsequent­ly renamed the Afro4000), and did their own bid scoring, resulting in the wrong party being awarded the tender.

Scopa chairman Themba Godi told Prasa representa­tives that the meeting would be “postponed” and that they needed to return next year when more informatio­n was available.

“We want to make sure Prasa is back on the rails. It has derailed,” he said.

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