The Mercury

Pirates escape with a slap on the wrist

- HERMAN GIBBS

THE Premier Soccer League’s disciplina­ry committee (DC) ruled that the charges brought against Irvin Khoza’s Orlando Pirates were so serious that PSL prosecutor Zola Majavu said in his statement it brought “the PSL, the game, Safa, CAF, Fifa and the sponsors into disrepute”.

Given that all football major stakeholde­rs were mentioned in his statement, it sounded like it was an offence of colossal reputation­al damage.

When Majavu started off by saying Orlando Pirates were fined a monetary amount of R100 000, it sounded justice would be served. However, when Majavu carried on reading, it turned out that the sentence was a mere slap on the wrist.

The offence did not cop a monetary fine at all after Majavu added that the amount of R100 000 is wholly suspended for the period of 12 months, on condition that during the period of suspension, they are not found guilty of the same offence again. The money the guilty Pirates will part with is the expense for the four sittings when the charge came under scrutiny.

The DC’s decision to mention the PSL, the game, Safa, CAF, Fifa and the sponsors brought home the seriousnes­s of the charge, which was to deny

Tim Sukazi, the TS Galaxy FC owner, admission to the stadium. Sukazi was armed with the required accreditat­ion, but the Orlando Stadium security personnel would not acknowledg­e the accreditat­ion and, inexplicab­ly, refused him access.

Sukazi – who heads up a corporate and commercial company TS Incorporat­ed – refused to accept their decision, and the burly Galaxy boss tried to barge his way past the security guards. The whole fracas was caught on video, and soon after the incident, it went viral. That would have been the time the disgracefu­l scenes at PSL chairman Khoza’s club would have caused irreparabl­e damage to football.

It was the second time a Galaxy official was singled for rough treatment by Pirates’ rogue security staff.

Last year, Galaxy media official Minenhle Mkhize was smacked in the face by a Pirates security official.

Mkhize, a former sports reporter at Independen­t Media, subsequent­ly laid a charge at a police station.

Yesterday, Mkhize said: “As a club, we are happy that justice has been served. That incident defamed our president and the club.’’*

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