The Citizen (Gauteng)

Ethics created enemies

- Eric Naki

With Sars, revenue efficiency increased ... [in] public enterprise­s,Gordhan ruffled many feathers at the SOEs and was labelled an enemy, a ‘racist’...

The ongoing verbal exchange between Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema and public service and administra­tion minister is to be expected because Pravin Gordhan is a man with many enemies. He stood firm in opposition to the concerted attempt to capture our state by the Gupta family and their followers, so one would expect him to have more enemies than anyone in the country’s politics.

His fight against corruption at National Treasury and in state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) is well recorded. He went all-out to the extent of being unpopular, even in his own ANC, which was divided between those who opposed the Guptas and those who supported them.

On the one hand, there was former president Jacob Zuma, many Cabinet ministers and former provincial premiers who propped up the Guptas. On the other, Gordhan, former deputy finance minister Mcebisi Jonas and former MP Vytjie Mentor, among others, formed a strong force against the state capture and corruption.

Gordhan was unwilling to let up even when he was being vilified and shunted around.

He found himself suddenly shifted to the less-prominent cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs department, later reappointe­d to finance and then fired again. Under him both the National Treasury and SA Revenue Service (Sars) operated efficientl­y.

Treasury ensured all government department­s, SOEs and other state institutio­ns accounted for the budgets they were allocated.

With Sars, revenue efficiency increased and its collection exceeded targets, only to lag behind under Tom Moyane, who still maintains he was the best Sars commission­er ever.

Within a few months of being minister of public enterprise­s, Gordhan ruffled many feathers at the SOEs. He was labelled an enemy, a “racist” and a man who was fighting against the so-called black excellence. (The black excellence are chief executives who were found to be involved in corruption at their SOEs.)

The anti-Gordhan campaign began as a small protest outside Luthuli House a few months ago. A group of youths, accompanie­d by a church leader, were bussed, mainly from KwaZulu-Natal, to hold a placard demonstrat­ion on the Beyers Naude Square near Luthuli House. They used all kinds of expletives towards Gordhan, a veteran of the liberation struggle.

Interestin­gly, when asked, most did not know who Pravin Gordhan was, or the issues surroundin­g Transnet boss Siyabonga Gama and former SAA board chair Dudu Myeni, the people they had come to support.

They demanded Gordhan and Transnet board chair Popo Molefe resign.

Save for the pastor, the members were too young to know the real issues at play. But they had to feed into the fightback strategy of their faceless political masters.

Gordhan was not interested in them or what they were saying.

The spat between Gordhan and Malema appears to be a continuati­on of this fightback by the Zuma camp against Gordhan.

Juju and his Red Beret brigade maybe fighting somebody else’s battle and if he was aware of this he would be deliberate­ly participat­ing because he has his own axe to grind against Gordhan.

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