Daily Dispatch

Cut corruption to save SAA

- GENEVIEVE QUINTAL and AHMED AREFF

For the loss-making SAA to become a viable business‚ it needs to clean out all the corruption that has plagued it for years‚ public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan said.

‘‘We were reappointe­d to government towards the end of February. So‚ eight months gone nobody is coming forward to say ‘I know who is corrupt at SAA’‚” he told SAA staff gathered at its offices in Kempton Park on Monday.

“Why are corrupt people being protected? Why are you protecting corrupt people? Why are you not coming forward? If we want the airline to survive we have to clean out the dirt.”

Gordhan’s address comes after finance minister Tito Mboweni suggested last week that the airline should be closed down. Mboweni’s call for the disbanding of the airline was made at an investor conference in New York on Thursday.

“It’s loss-making. We are unlikely to sort out the situation‚ so my view would be close it down‚” he told delegates.

Gordhan appeared to be against selling the airline.

The public enterprise­s minister said on Monday that those who stole money and property from SAA must pay it back. He said that whenever he spoke up about corruption‚ he ended up being attacked by Twitterbot­s.

“We need some courage from you now – the courage to stand up for the right things otherwise this airline will not be saved.”

The state-owned entity has struggled to generate a profit since 2011 and has come under fire for putting strain on the fiscus.

It recorded losses of R5.6bn in 2014-2015‚ R1.4bn in 20152016‚ R5.5bn in 2016-2017 and R5.7bn in 2017-2018‚ and is running at a loss in 2018-2019. The airline has projected further losses until it breaks even in the 2020-2021 financial year. It has received R10bn in bailouts over the last two financial years and relies on a R19bn guarantee from the state to keep operating.

In October‚ the medium-term budget policy statement (MTBPS) highlighte­d that SAA would get a cash injection of R5bn to enable the national carrier to settle its debts.

Gordhan said government did not have enough cash to bail out every state-owned enterprise that was in trouble.

He said the airline had to work as one team ‘‘pulling in one direction with one purpose in mind”.

“Otherwise we are going to fail.”–

 ?? Picture: BUSINESS DAY/Trevor Samson ?? NO HOLDS BARRED: Pravin Gordhan has taken a hard line over SAA, appealing to the airline to stamp out corruption.
Picture: BUSINESS DAY/Trevor Samson NO HOLDS BARRED: Pravin Gordhan has taken a hard line over SAA, appealing to the airline to stamp out corruption.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa