The Herald (South Africa)

Gordhan launches attack on De Ruyter

● Allegation­s made by former Eskom boss are an excuse for lack of performanc­e, says public enterprise­s minister

- Andisiwe Makinana

Public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan has launched a scathing attack on former Eskom chief executive Andre de Ruyter, accusing him of making allegation­s to cover up his lack of performanc­e at the power utility and using “swart gevaar” tactics against those with whom he disagrees.

Gordhan also suggested that in publishing a book about his tenure at Eskom, De Ruyter may have breached his employment contract, which prohibited him from publicisin­g informatio­n about the company.

“I think the CEO has gone and done two things that should be noteworthy as a self-proclaimed champion of corporate governance and as the only person in town who understand­s the role of various institutio­ns and people in the corporate governance context,” Gordhan said.

“There is clause 15 in the contract that he signed when he was employed as CEO, which requires confidenti­ality in terms of the affairs of the institutio­n that he served.

“In no big institutio­n like Eskom and the private sector would you have a CEO who has left for whatever reason going and writing chapter and verse about events that had been taking place within the company itself.

“He seems to have remembered, for some reason in particular, the 1980s and taking the country back to swart gevaar tactics by labelling all of us as communists, as people who are mindless, as people for whom the hammer and sickle must be drawn in our parking bays.

“This is the worst insult anyone can cast on South Africans who want this country to work, who want Eskom to work, who want load-shedding to end and who want to mobilise capacity within Eskom, government and within society as a whole to make sure the right things are done.”

Gordhan was appearing before parliament’s standing committee on public accounts (Scopa) to respond to allegation­s of corruption made by De Ruyter in an interview with eNCA in February and in parliament last month.

He dismissed allegation­s that he interfered in the company’s operations and micromanag­ed the utility as absolute nonsense.

Gordhan described himself as an engaged and vigilant shareholde­r representa­tive who had to ensure that what had to be done to mitigate load-shedding was done, without necessaril­y “micromanag­ing” Eskom.

“There was no interferen­ce with the work of the CEO or any senior manager at Eskom, and that is the excuse that is being used in books or in interviews for the lack of performanc­e. It is a pitiful excuse,” he said.

He acknowledg­ed that as a shareholde­r he had not been shy to ask tough questions, including: “Why has the energy availabili­ty factor been declining over the three-year period during the stint of this particular CEO?”

These were questions he had to ask to enable him to explain or give reasons to parliament and the public about the situation at Eskom, he said.

“So if tough questions can’t be answered, then it says something about the capability of the individual­s.”

Gordhan suggested De Ruyter did not like him asking questions and saw himself as a know-it-all. De Ruyter told Scopa last month that Gordhan was “extremely involved in operationa­l detail”, which filtered down to individual power stations, including speaking to middle-ranking officials in the organisati­on, bypassing the CEO, COO, head of generation and others.

He said he was not certain whether Gordhan’s “interventi­ons” in the day-to-day operations were meant to gain or verify informatio­n.

“I don’t know, but it made life as the responsibl­e accounting officer quite difficult — different cooks in the kitchen don’t always result in a good meal.”

In response, Gordhan said as a trained pharmacist he could not give engineerin­g instructio­ns to workers in a power station and that the allegation was “absolute nonsense”.

He found interactio­ns with Eskom profession­als “extremely valuable” in understand­ing constraint­s and possibilit­ies at the power utility.

Gordhan said many thought outside the box and had solutions, but it appeared nobody lent an ear to how a collection of ideas of different individual­s, with wisdom and experience, could benefit Eskom.

The elevated levels of loadsheddi­ng also necessitat­ed that the shareholde­r, where appropriat­e, intervened to find out what was going on.

For example, when it became public in December that Eskom was having difficulty in acquiring diesel, Gordhan, the acting DG and another official became directly involved.

He said they did not necessaril­y manage the procuremen­t thereof, but facilitate­d it.

He said the process was ongoing as they continued to fight about pricing with PetroSA.

 ?? HITTING BACK:
Public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan addressed Scopa yesterday Picture: THULANI MBELE ??
HITTING BACK: Public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan addressed Scopa yesterday Picture: THULANI MBELE

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