Sunday Times

Tax chief ‘sat for over a year’ on Treasury tax claim

Suspended No 2 at SARS faces fresh allegation­s

- THANDUXOLO JIKA and SABELO SIKITI

SUSPENDED South African Revenue Service second-in-command Jonas Makwakwa appears to have sat for more than a year on a tax complaint against a Durban businessma­n with close links to President Jacob Zuma.

The Sunday Times understand­s that in April 2014 the National Treasury sent a communiqué to SARS about its suspicions that Mabheleni Ntuli paid no tax on R18-million he was paid for memorial services for Nelson Mandela in Mpumalanga in 2013.

An events management company owned by businesswo­man Carol Bouwer paid the politicall­y connected businessma­n R18-million through his company Dartingo Trading 20.

She hired him as a subcontrac­tor to supply infrastruc­ture for services.

The Mpumalanga government paid Bouwer’s firm, Carol Bouwer Production­s, R39-million as the main contractor organising the services.

This week, Makwakwa denied impropriet­y. He said he had no recollecti­on of any matter involving Carol Bouwer Production­s or Dartingo Trading coming to him.

Bouwer said: “CBP is a compliant taxpayer. If that were not the case the company would not still be trading. Our suppliers are paid on the basis of a valid tax invoice. No, CBP has not had dealings with any executives at SARS regarding this matter.”

It has emerged that the Treasury, which lodged a complaint with the Hawks on this tender, alerted then SARS acting commission­er Ivan Pillay to suspected nonpayment of tax by Ntuli and Bouwer on money earned for the events.

A former official in Pillay’s office said that there was such a communiqué, and it would have been handled by Makwakwa’s office after Pillay’s departure. “Correspond­ence like that would have generally entered into our routine risk and case management system,” he said. “It was not part of significan­t cases that required special governance to be put into place. It would have been in his office.” Pillay declined to comment.

Two senior government officials said that Makwakwa, as the chief officer for business and individual taxes at SARS, handled the alert.

But since 2014 there has been no action against the companies. “It was suspected that since the entities did not have any VAT numbers they may not have made the necessary arrangemen­ts with SARS to meet their tax obligation­s,” said an official.

The other official said that because of the restructur­ing at SARS, which resulted in the technical dissolutio­n of its Large Business Centre, all the corporate clients were centralise­d under Makwakwa. “That was how the file was moved to him,” he said.

“What we got in this case is they were only limiting the investigat­ors to Carol Bouwer. If Carol Bouwer transfers money to Ntuli, then obviously Ntuli must also pay tax . . . But in this case, they were limited to her and not the other one. The problem with the way SARS is organised right now is that if there are reports from investigat­ions against defaulters it will only be one person, Makwakwa, who will go and negotiate with them.

“The policy is very clear that for large corporates you can’t go [alone] and negotiate with somebody who is owing,” the source said.

“The suspicion was that the company [Dartingo Trading 20] was not tax compliant and should be investigat­ed. There seems to have been no investigat­ion by Makwakwa,” said one government source.

Ntuli had not responded to queries by the time of going to print.

But Makwakwa said yesterday that his office did not negotiate with clients. His office only dealt with case selection, meaning they decided which cases were selected for audit. “Whoever has got informatio­n will go to somebody within my unit and they will look at the matter to see if there is merit. We would do evaluation to see if there is need for an audit. If there is a need, we would forward it to enforcemen­t.”

Makwakwa was suspended on Thursday after allegation­s of misconduct over R1.2-million in “suspicious and unusual” transactio­ns. It was said he received “unexplaine­d” cash deposits and bank transfers amounting to R1.2-million from 2010 to 2016.

SARS commission­er Tom Moyane announced yesterday he had appointed independen­t internatio­nal law firm Hogan Lovells to investigat­e.

The Sunday Times reported last month that Ntuli splurged most of the R18-million on cars, jewellery and clothing and paid R55 000 into the bank account of one of Zuma’s wives, Nompumelel­o “MaNtuli” Ntuli-Zuma. Ntuli is known to have donated to Zuma trusts in the past. He is not a blood relative of Ntuli-Zuma, but regards her as family.

The Hawks are still investigat­ing a case of fraud and corruption related to Mpumalanga tenders for Mandela memorial services. This followed a Treasury complaint after Bouwer’s firm was appointed without any tender process being followed.

The speed with which payments were made to her in December 2013 also raised questions.

 ??  ?? ’NO RECOLLECTI­ON’: Suspended SARS bigwig Jonas Makwakwa
’NO RECOLLECTI­ON’: Suspended SARS bigwig Jonas Makwakwa

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