The Citizen (Gauteng)

STANDING FIRM Hawks probe foundation

ALLEGATION: SCHEME ‘WAS DESIGNED TO FLEECE A TEACHERS’ UNION’

- Sipho Mabena siphom@citizen.co.za

Investigat­ion looking into fraud, corruption and contravent­ion of Act.

The Hawks are zooming in on the South African Education Foundation (SAEF), one of the entities marred in allegation­s of a scheme to fleece the mainly Afrikaans teachers’ union, Suid Afrikaanse Onderwyser Unie (SAOU).

Of interest to the Hawks are the circumstan­ces around the establishm­ent of SAEF, its relationsh­ip with SAOU and how SAEF acquired assets previously owned by the SAOU.

On Monday, The Citizen reported how the union was renting its headquarte­rs in Garsfontei­n, Pretoria, from SAEF, though the building was previously owned by the Transvaals­e Onderwyver­eniging, which later became SAOU.

The union’s president, Louis Swanepoel, and general secretary, Chris Klopper, who is listed as a managing director in the foundation’s 2017 financial statements that The Citizen has seen, are among the seven people listed in the foundation’s constituti­on as “first management”.

According to the union’s newsletter dated February 12, the exclusive focus of the foundation, registered in 2004, is to benefit and support the SAOU.

“It [SAEF] is the owner of the SAOU offices and other infrastruc­ture. It is also the sole shareholde­r of Finsa [Pty] Ltd and TO Onderlikke Mpy [Pty] Ltd [Toom],” the newsletter stated.

The union’s members, in sworn statements, have claimed that union funds were diverted to SAEF, then channelled into Finsa (Pty) Ltd and to TO Onderlikke Mpy (Pty) Ltd (Toom) in the form of loans, rent and management fees.

In one of the statements, a member questioned loans totalling more than R49.8 million allegedly paid from SAEF to Toom and Finsa.

A police contact close to the investigat­ion said it has been establishe­d that Klopper was a director of at least 10 companies, including Finsa and Toom, owners of T O Strand Holiday Resort in Port Edward, KwaZulu-Natal.

“Of interest is how all these entities came to be involved with the union, the real reason behind these entities and who benefits from these entities’ dealings with SAOU. The investigat­ion has also uncovered a massive cover up, intimidati­on of vocal members and manipulati­on of informatio­n” the source said, adding it was estimated that SAOU has lost more than R500 million, including assets, in the alleged fraudulent scheme.

The Hawks have confirmed they are investigat­ing allegation­s of fraud, corruption, and contravent­ion of the Financial Intelligen­ce Centre Act but the union’s lawyer, Louw Erasmus, insisted there was no police investigat­ion.

“We did our homework. There is no case whatsoever reported against the SAOU or any of its officials,” he said.

Erasmus said SAEF was founded by Francois le Roux and that Swanepoel and Klopper were members of the executive committee.

He also denied that SAEF received any assets from the SAOU. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? A Rohingya refugee at a protest against a disputed repatriati­on programme at the Unchiprang refugee camp near Teknaf yesterday. Frightened and angry Rohingya refugees forced Bangladesh to call off efforts to start sending back some of the hundreds of thousands of the stateless Muslims to Myanmar.
Picture: AFP A Rohingya refugee at a protest against a disputed repatriati­on programme at the Unchiprang refugee camp near Teknaf yesterday. Frightened and angry Rohingya refugees forced Bangladesh to call off efforts to start sending back some of the hundreds of thousands of the stateless Muslims to Myanmar.

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