The Citizen (KZN)

BOSASA’S LAST GASP

The group has approached the high court in a last-ditch effort to hold on to company assets – valued at about R1 billion – sold at an auction for about a tenth of that amount.

- Charles Cilliers news@citizen.co.za

Latest legal bid could create mother of all headaches for company’s liquidator­s.

African Global Holdings (AGH, formerly Bosasa) director Jared Watson yesterday filed papers in the High Court in Johannesbu­rg to have the company’s recent massive auction of all its assets declared illegal.

If the latest legal bid is successful, it would create the mother of all headaches for the company’s liquidator­s, who would have to recover hundreds of items that were sold under the hammer at the start of this month.

They could also be held personally liable for more than R1 billion, which the company feels is what the assets are actually worth, while acknowledg­ing they wouldn’t be able to pay it, meaning only an order setting aside the sales would be practical.

They were sold in what Watson describes as a “fire sale” for about R100 million.

On the first day of what commentato­rs called the “auction of the decade”, competitio­n to buy vehicles, furniture and other moveable assets appeared to be fierce, but by the time Park Village Auctions got around to selling the big-ticket items, especially the properties and a copper plant, the headlines were dominated by how cheaply they were sold for.

According to the company’s own paperwork, the replacemen­t value of the massive Lindela Repatriati­on Centre in Krugersdor­p was at least R244 million, though it would probably cost R300 million to build it again from scratch today.

It initially sold for R60 million to a bidder from Limpopo, but yesterday the department of public works announced it was exercising its right of first refusal to purchase the facility for the same amount.

Bosasa’s head office, a sprawling campus in Krugersdor­p with a command and control centre, armouries, call centre, backup power systems and even a testing centre for fencing products, sold for just R14 million to Fidelity Security. AGH had valued it at R168 million.

In Watson’s court papers he claims Fidelity had been planning to buy it for eight months.

A copper plant valued at more than R260 million sold for just R11.5 million at auction.

Watson, who is also the executor of the estate of his late uncle and the group’s chief executive officer Gavin Watson, has accused the liquidator­s of acting outside their mandate by not consulting with the company’s directors and obtaining their consent for the auction.

On the eve of the auction, Watson also applied for business rescue for AGH, which he contends should also have put a stay on the auction itself.

Watson believes several parts of the group can continue to be run as going concerns.

According to him, AGH owes none of its creditors any money any more, has discharged its duties to staff (the group now has only 50 employees from the original 4 500) and the claim of hundreds of millions from the SA Revenue Service in allegedly unpaid taxes, penalties and interest is not yet proven.

The group was in any event willing to sell mining shares valued at R300 million.

“As far as we know, Bosasa owes only about R500 000 in taxes,” Watson told The Citizen, a claim he repeated under oath in court papers. He added there was also R72 million in the company’s bank account under the liquidator­s’ control.

He has alleged that the provisiona­l liquidator­s rushed through the auction since they stood to make as much as 10% in commission fees, but stood the risk of not being appointed as the final liquidator­s, and therefore the chance of handsome payment.

All three provisiona­l co-liquidator­s, Cloete Murray, Ralph Lutchman and Tania Oosthuizen, were sent a list of questions for their side of the story, but only Murray responded.

He suggested “you have no understand­ing (not even limited) of what liquidator­s do and how they go about exercising legal duties”, advising us to “inform yourself” on the Companies Act and Insolvency Act.

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