The Citizen (Gauteng)

Brown, Gigaba must explain

COMMITTEE REPORT: IMPLICATES FORMER MINISTERS GIGABA, BROWN

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

A damning report has recommende­d former ministers Lynne Brown and Malusi Gigaba appear before the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture to explain their roles in corruption and corporate capture at Eskom.

Threats to personal safety and security were made by anonymous parties.

Irregular procuremen­t, mismanagem­ent, non-compliance with existing policies, malfeasanc­e, corruption and oversight failures by ministers Lynn Brown and Malusi Gigagba were just a few of the findings released yesterday by the portfolio committee on public enterprise­s in its report into Eskom.

“The inquiry has exposed a set of executives and senior staff that appear to have been part of a network that actively participat­ed in irregular, corrupt and/or otherwise unlawful contracts and processes at Eskom,” stated the report.

“Lifestyle audits of implicated individual­s must be conducted and, where necessary, reports to legal, regulatory, and investigat­ive authoritie­s.”

It went on to say the list included department advisors and public enterprise­s employees, Eskom non-executive board members, Eskom staff and executives, “external persons who unduly influenced Eskom decisions, companies and persons who benefitted unduly from contracts with Eskom”.

The committee recommende­d criminal investigat­ions into “possible cases of fraud, corruption, and other unlawful conduct with respect to the actions of the listed individual­s and firms; and the possibilit­y of financial crimes”.

It also recommende­d “the two former public enterprise­s ministers, Gigaba and Brown, must make presentati­ons to the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture in order to share insights into the roles they played as shareholde­r representa­tives during the period of corruption and corporate capture that flourished at Eskom”.

According to the report, “baseless” legal challenges, attempts to subvert investigat­ions, public smear campaigns and threats to the personal security of committee members, witnesses and their families were some of the conditions the committee worked under.

Threats to personal safety and security were made by anonymous parties against inquiry chairperso­n Zukiswa Rantho – including an anonymous threat to her child that “your mother is making life difficult for us” – DA MP Natasha Mazzone, whose car

Your mother is making life difficult for us.

and documents were tampered with, and evidence leader advocate Ntuthuzelo Vanara.

“Attempts were allegedly also made by the erstwhile state security minister Bongani Bongo to offer a bribe to advocate Vanara with a blank cheque to try to derail the work of this committee.”

Aside from Gigaba and Brown, a long list of people should “present themselves to the Zondo commission in order for them to shed more light on the allegation­s of corruption and state capture at Eskom during their tenure”.

These included Zola Tsotsi, Brian Molefe, Sean Maritz, Anoj Singh, Matshela Koko, Dudu Myeni, Duduzane Zuma, Rajesh “Tony” Gupta, Atul Gupta and Ajay Gupta.

Molefe’s retirement package and reappointm­ent, Eskom’s alleged role in ensuring Tegeta was able to buy Optimum Coal Holdings, its award of an estimated R11.7 billion worth of coal contracts at inflated prices to Tegeta Exploratio­n, the R43 million contract with the Guptas’ media company, TNA (Pty) Ltd and Eskom’s R400 million to Trillian Capital Partners “for management consulting and advisory services” were also examined.

The committee has recommende­d parliament hand the report, together with the documentat­ion and the evidence gathered, to the commission into state capture for further investigat­ion.

The report, which was more than a year in the making, was unanimousl­y adopted by the committee. –

 ?? Pictures: Gallo Images ?? ANSWERS WANTED. A damning report says former public enterprise­s minister Malusi Gigaba needs to answer for the role he played as an Eskom shareholde­r representa­tive during the period of corruption and corporate capture that flourished at the power utility.
Pictures: Gallo Images ANSWERS WANTED. A damning report says former public enterprise­s minister Malusi Gigaba needs to answer for the role he played as an Eskom shareholde­r representa­tive during the period of corruption and corporate capture that flourished at the power utility.
 ??  ?? IN HOT WATER. It has been recommende­d that Lynne Brown make a presentati­on to the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture.
IN HOT WATER. It has been recommende­d that Lynne Brown make a presentati­on to the Commission of Inquiry into State Capture.

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