Mail & Guardian

North West ex-premier punted VBS

A forensic report claims Supra Mahumapelo urged municipali­ties to invest with the bank

- Thanduxolo Jika

Aforensic investigat­ion has suggested that former North West premier Supra Mahumapelo was behind the province’s municipali­ties illegally investing R314-million with the collapsed VBS Mutual Bank.

Two highly placed sources, one in the treasury and one in the provincial government, confirmed this, saying it was Mahumapelo who had invited VBS officials to a conference in North West.

The bank collapsed and is on the verge of being liquidated after almost R2-billion was looted through fraud and corruption. The biggest losers so far have been municipali­ties, which are unlikely to recover their money and have so far been refused bailouts from the government. Four of these are from North West.

Mahumapelo, who resigned as premier earlier this year after violent service delivery protests and political pressure, is said to have “vigorously encouraged” municipali­ties to invest in VBS after inviting the bank’s representa­tives to make a presentati­on at his Bokone Bophirima premier’s co-ordinating council conference in March last year.

The conference was organised at Mahumapelo’s behest and was attended by MECs, mayors, municipal managers and other key government officials to discuss expenditur­e reports, key provincial projects and service delivery matters.

This informatio­n is contained in a forensic investigat­ion report conSouth ducted by audit firm SekelaXabi­so on behalf of that province’s department of local government and human settlement­s into the four municipali­ties that invested with VBS.

In a section of the report, titled Common Trends Noted during Our Investigat­ion, it states: “We were informed during our interviews that VBS were given an opportunit­y to present their services and that the former North West premier vigorously encouraged the municipali­ties to invest with VBS, as VBS was a black-owned bank, which offered better interest rates.”

The report, which the Mail & Guardian has seen, was presented on Monday in Tlokwe, where the ANC’s provincial task team (PTT) met and discussed the VBS scandal.

Vuyisile Ngesi, spokespers­on for North West Premier Job Mokgoro, confirmed that VBS representa­tives had been invited to the conference last year. “According to records at our disposal, the VBS Mutual Bank made a presentati­on to the provincial executive council at the Bokone Bophirima premier’s co-ordinating council meeting held on March 15 2017. However, no resolution­s were ever taken in that regard and subsequent­ly no permission or approval was given by exco [the executive committee] to any municipali­ty in the North West to invest sums of money into the bank.”

Ngesi said that, after receiving the forensic report, the provincial executive council last month resolved that the local government department should act against the implicated officials.

But Mahumapelo denied personally inviting banks or any other institutio­n. He also stated that he was not aware of the report that was tabled before the PTT and the province.

“In an interview with the SABC on Wednesday, I placed on record that, through our Setsokotsa­ne programme, Absa, Standard Bank, VBS and FNB were always welcome to market themselves to the communitie­s,” he said.

“The government exco, as peoplecent­red, accessible and responsive to both the private and public sector, always welcomed individual­s and companies to make presentati­ons to the exco cluster committees and premiers co-ordinating council.

“As premier, I had no power to instruct any municipali­ty to enter into any transactio­n, including banks. Municipali­ties are responsibl­e on their own to follow their own internal processes to deal with matters of such a nature.”

The report details how municipal officials of the Madibeng, Mahikeng, Moretele and Dr Ruth Segomotsi Mompati municipali­ties irregularl­y invested millions with VBS, contraveni­ng the Municipal Finance Management Act (MFMA) and other regulation­s.

It also details how there was possible political pressure on the municipal officials to invest with VBS, as none conducted any risk assessment­s.

“All municipali­ties had been introduced to VBS prior to them investing with the bank, which suggest that there may have been some form of political encouragem­ent for the officials to use the VBS services,” SekelaXabi­so said in the report.

A senior provincial ANC official in the province told the M&G that, at the Monday meeting, China Dodovu, who is tasked with governance and legislatio­n in the PTT, recommende­d that the mayors of the four municipali­ties should also be held accountabl­e.

“After his observatio­ns of the damning forensic report, he proposed that the mayors must be fired because the buck stops with them. These mayors should have picked up these financial irregulari­ties because they are supposed to get monthly financial reports from CFOs [chief financial officers] and MMs [municipal managers],” the official said.

“They completely failed to remedy the situation by keeping quiet and can’t now claim ignorance. It is clear that there was political influence to invest in VBS from that co-ordinating council meeting.”

Dodovu would not comment and referred questions to the PTT.

PTT spokespers­on Kabelo Mataboge, despite saying he would comment, had not responded at the time of going to print.

Mahikeng mayor Betty Diakanyo declined to comment, saying that the municipali­ty was conducting its own investigat­ion. Madibeng mayor Jostine Mothibe promised she would respond but never did. Dr Ruth Segomotsi Mompati mayor Boitumelo Mahlangu declined to comment and Moretele mayor Andries Monaheng did not return phone calls or respond to text messages.

The forensic investigat­ion further found that “none of the municipali­ties received investment certificat­es from VBS Mutual Bank during or immediatel­y after the investment­s”.

The officials who invested the money include chief financial officers and municipal managers. According to the municipali­ties’ investment policies, three quotations are needed before an investment is made, and investment­s must be spread between banks to minimise risk.

“VBS Mutual Bank was always the last bank to send their interest rates quotations, which suggests that a quotation system may have been rigged through collusion between officials and VBS,” according to the SekelaXabi­so report.

It emerged during the investigat­ion that the Madibeng municipali­ty had invested R31-million of its conditiona­l grant with VBS and that it was not clear who authorised the investment as instructio­n forms were signed by junior officials. Madibeng is conducting its own investigat­ion.

Their counterpar­ts in the Mahikeng municipali­ty invested R83-million from the municipal infrastruc­ture grant and municipal equitable share (overpaymen­t from the department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs) and only received R7-million in returns from VBS.

The Moretele municipali­ty took R50-million meant for water services, even though its residents struggled with water supply, and put it into VBS.

The Dr Ruth Segomotsi Mompati municipali­ty took R150-million from its regional bulk infrastruc­ture grant, building fund and money meant for free basic services to invest in VBS.

The forensic investigat­ion also establishe­d that municipal officials made a frantic attempt to withdraw their investment on March 12, the day on which the curator sent out a notice that VBS was being placed under administra­tion.

In August last year, the treasury issued a circular informing municipali­ties not to make deposits into the mutual bank as this was prohibited by the MFMA.

“All municipali­ties had been introduced to VBS prior to them investing with the bank, which suggest that there may have been some form of political encouragem­ent”

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 ??  ?? Fallen: Supra Mahumapelo denies inviting VBS bank to a conference of government officials. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la/Netwerk24/Gallo Images
Fallen: Supra Mahumapelo denies inviting VBS bank to a conference of government officials. Photo: Felix Dlangamand­la/Netwerk24/Gallo Images

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