The Citizen (Gauteng)

FIRED! NEXT?

PRESIDENCY: DECISION TAKEN AFTER RECOMMENDA­TION BY SARS COMMISSION

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

Tom Moyane, left, yesterday lost his long battle to hold on to his job as Sars commission­er when President Cyril Ramaphosa sacked him. Malusi Gigaba, right, could be next, following the failure of his attempts to stop the courts from labelling him as someone who lied under oath.

Acting commission­er Mark Kingon will remain in office until vacancy is filled.

Tom Moyane’s desperate rearguard action to hold on to his job as SA Revenue Service (Sars) commission­er ended in defeat last night when he was fired, with immediate effect, by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

But the issues look set to end up in court after Moyane’s open challenge to Ramaphosa last month about the recommenda­tions of the Commission of Inquiry into Tax Administra­tion and Governance at Sars.

A statement from the presidency said the decision had been taken following “the recommenda­tion made by the Sars commission chaired by Judge Robert Nugent that immediate action is needed to forestall any further deteriorat­ion of our tax administra­tion system”.

The presidency said Ramaphosa had sent a letter to Moyane, which noted that the interim report of the commission “paints a deeply concerning picture of the current state of Sars and the reckless mismanagem­ent which characteri­sed your tenure as commission­er of Sars.”

The letter went on: “Of further, and in many ways greater, concern is your refusal to meaningful­ly participat­e in the Sars commission in order to assist with identifyin­g the root causes of the systemic failures at Sars and ways in which to arrest these.”

Ramaphosa also indicated in his letter that the representa­tions submitted by Moyane in response to the recommenda­tions of the commission fail entirely to deal with the substantiv­e issues the report raises.

“The interim report makes clear that there is considerab­le evidence, which the Sars commission gathered, indicating that in order to resolve the challenges at Sars, it would be best to terminate your services,” he said.

The statement said that acting Sars commission­er Mark Kingon “remains in place until such time as the vacancy of national commission­er is filled”.

Moyane failed in his bid to face down Nugent and Ramaphosa with his own letter to the president earlier this month, which set Ramaphosa a deadline to react to his (Moyane’s) responses to Nugent.

Moyane did not testify at the commission, citing “inherent bias” and “gross unfairness” in a document Nugent called a disgrace and “littered with abuse, invective and sinister suggestion”.

“What is clear to the commission is that Sars reeks of intrigue, fear, distrust and suspicion. We have heard of it repeatedly in evidence, and we have encountere­d it ourselves,” Nugent wrote.

The recommenda­tion went on to say Moyane’s dismissal should happen “regardless of what the outcome of his disciplina­ry inquiry is”, and Ramaphosa should appoint a new commission­er.

“We stress that the replacemen­t of Mr Moyane is not a panacea‚ but only the first necessary measure without which there is no possibilit­y of rectifying the damage that has been done to Sars‚ and any further recommenda­tions will be fruitless,” the report read.

However, in the combative letter to Ramaphosa, Moyane accused Nugent of pursuing a predetermi­ned outcome.

Moyane’s attorney, Eric Mabuza, was reported to have said that Moyane was never given an opportunit­y to confront his accusers.

Mabuza claimed Nugent’s report was based on a “deliberate distortion of facts”.

Mabuza claimed Nugent made Moyane look like the “Devil incarnate”.

The DA welcomed Moyane’s axing. The party’s shadow minister of finance, Alf Lees, said that “in the short period of a mere threeand-a-half years in charge of Sars, Tom Moyane managed to reduce the vital entity from being a world leader in tax collection to being a friend of the ANC’s state capture project”.

He quoted Nugent’s words that “the day Mr Moyane took office was a calamity for Sars”.

Lees continued: “The DA expresses its thanks to Mark Kingon, the acting Sars commission­er, for taking on the very difficult task of stopping the destructio­n at Sars and starting to fix the rot left by Tom Moyane.

“We urge him to continue the work he has embarked upon and therefore ensuring that the path towards restoring taxpayer trust in Sars is not deviated from.”

Lees said that “fully restoring the reputation of Sars in the eyes of the public” would require the urgent appointmen­t of a permanent commission­er of Sars.

Ramaphosa, said Lees, “must embark upon a completely transparen­t process to identify the best possible candidates of impeccable integrity and then to take considered advice from a range of experts in the tax and revenue collection fields,” before making the appointmen­t. –

It would be best to terminate your services.

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