Sunday Times

High-flyers mooted as SAA looks for yet another CEO

- SABELO SKITI

THE SAA board has begun the search for its eighth CEO in three years as it seeks to stabilise the embattled airline.

This comes just two weeks after its latest acting CEO, former head of human resources Thuli Mpshe, was removed from the hot seat amid talk of clashes with controvers­ial board chairwoman Dudu Myeni.

Mpshe has been replaced by Musa Zwane, head of SAA’s technical division.

The Sunday Times has reliably learnt that the names of former SABC CEO Peter Matlare, South African Express CEO Inati Ntshanga, and former Public Service Commission member Jerry Vilakazi have been forwarded to Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene, who will make a recommenda­tion to the cabinet for approval early next year.

The three were picked from a shortlist of 15 names from 86 applicatio­ns for the job, a senior SAA insider said.

SAA did not officially confirm the names, but three independen­t sources did.

Matlare, 55, was coy when contacted for comment, saying only: “I’m aware of the position but cannot comment any further than that.” SCALP-HUNTER: Controvers­ial SAA chairwoman Dudu Myeni

He is serving out his notice at Tiger Brands, where he has been CEO since 2008 after leaving Vodacom.

Ntshanga, considered the board favourite because of his experience in aviation, said his focus was on SA Express. “I don’t think I should be speaking about anything else but that.”

Vilakazi, who could not be reached by the time of going to press, is chairman of Netcare Limited and a former CEO of Business Unity South Africa.

SAA spokesman Tlali Tlali said: “A process leading to the appointmen­t of a substantiv­e CEO is well under way. An announceme­nt will be made once all the necessary provisions have been made.”

SAA’s boardroom is littered with the scalps of executives who have left after battles with Myeni, some accusing her of flouting corporate governance to influence procuremen­t.

SAA has endured a sustained period of crisis and instabilit­y over the past six months, compounded by the resignatio­n of several senior managers including chief financial officer Wolf Meyer, chief strategy officer Barry Parsons and board member Tony Dixon.

In his resignatio­n letter in September, Parsons made allegation­s of board interferen­ce at SAA Technical. Meyer fell out with the board over a R6-billion leasing deal with Airbus.

Myeni unilateral­ly changed the structure of the yet-to-beconclude­d deal, which had ministeria­l backing as a major component of the airline’s long-term turnaround plan. She has submitted a new applicatio­n for her deal, which will see a yet-unknown local financier buy five A330s and lease them to SAA.

The airline is also awaiting the outcome of a “going concern” applicatio­n before Nene to allow it to hold its AGM, which is eight months overdue.

This week, an internal report revealed the dire financial situation of SAA, which is technicall­y insolvent and surviving on debt backed by R14-billion in government guarantees.

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