The Star Early Edition

Institute clarifies board duties as Mavuso defends doing her job

- PHILIPPA LARKIN philippa.larkin@inl.co.za

THE INSTITUTE of Directors (IoDSA) yesterday clarified the role of a board member in the wake of the spat between Business Leadership SA (BLSA) chief executive Busisiwe Mavuso and Parliament’s standing committee on public accounts (Scopa). Eskom board member Busi Mavuso, who is the chief executive of Business Leadership South Africa, is adamant she is doing her ethical duty as a board member.

This after Mavuso defended her actions at Scopa on Friday acting as an Eskom board member after she said the ANC-led government had created the mess that Eskom was in and subsequent­ly then was asked by Scopa chairperso­n Mkhuleko Hlengwa to leave the meeting.

Yesterday, the IoDSA, whose chief executive Parmi Natesan is on leave, in answer to questions on Mavuso and board members, would not be drawn into the finer details of the dispute, but said a board member irrespecti­ve of whether serving in the private or public sector had the duty to act in the best interests of the organisati­on and with the proper skill, care and diligence expected of a reasonable board member.

IoDSA said: “In this situation, the Eskom Board would thus be held accountabl­e to answer for its decisions and actions during its tenure. It is, however, only fair that such individual­s are held to account for their own actions while in office; and not for the actions/ decisions of those who may have preceded them.

“They, however, can be held accountabl­e for correcting the actions of previous boards over a reasonable timeline.”

A board member should always be transparen­t and honest in their disclosure­s to the board, other reporting committee and/or the public, and should be willing to answer for the execution of their responsibi­lities.

IoDSA in February in the wake of the Zondo reports into state capture urged the president to provide the courageous leadership the circumstan­ces demand and set a new course, in which board and senior executive appointmen­ts will be guided by objective processes and criteria based on competence and an ethical commitment to the organisati­on’s best interests.

This after rife corruption and political meddling at state-owned enterprise­s.

In an interview with 702’s Bongani Bingwa yesterday morning Muvoso explained that as the Eskom board representa­tive at Scopa, she was required to answer questions about what the power utility was tasked to do.

The Scopa committee had been unhappy with what they found at the oversight visit to Eskom’s Medupi power station in Lephalale. She said yesterday: “Eskom’s board is responsibl­e for the decision made during their tenure, but unfortunat­ely there are things the current board cannot answer to because they pre-date the current board.”

She said there was no way to answer the question to the board of Medupi and Kusile, without referring to the history.

“I answered a question that was put to the board ... If you want SOEs to be filled with people who will behave and who will be pliable and puppets to Parliament, then we must say so and make those appointmen­ts, accordingl­y,” Mavuso said.

Mavuso said she did not sit on the Eskom board as an “ANC deployee as the chair (Hlengwa) puts it”.

“It is this thinking that is problemati­c. When we sit on these boards we sit there as independen­t profession­als charged with providing an independen­t view of the running of the entity and responsibl­e to act in the interest of that company,” she said.

Hlengwa said the buck stopped with the board, saying Kusile’s deadline had been changed by the board. He wanted to know why the board was moving the timeline. Eskom was not delivering on its mandate. “Who else do you ask? The questions go the board and executives.”

However, he said Mavuso had raised the right issue in the wrong place. Hlengwa said he wanted Mavuso, as a board member, to answer the questions at hand. “She refused point blank to do so,” he said.

Meanwhile, Eskom yesterday confirmed “constructi­ve and robust engagement­s” with Scopa during its follow-up to an oversight visit to some of Eskom’s facilities undertaken last month.

During their visit to Medupi, Kusile power stations and Megawatt Park, Scopa had called on Eskom to account for progress and expenditur­e on the new build program and exhorted management to redouble its efforts to minimise load-shedding. “Eskom appreciate­s and understand­s the committee’s input as a continuati­on of its role to safeguard the public purse and assets,” a statement from the utility said.

“Eskom was provided an opportunit­y to give visibility to the trade-offs we make in our daily operations, while navigating between fiscal, environmen­tal, industrial and energy security and poverty alleviatio­n imperative­s.”

Eskom said also that Scopa had undertaken to engage key arms of government such as law enforcemen­t and municipali­ties to assist the utility in operating effectivel­y, combat entrenched networks of corruption and to maintain the utility’s liquidity.

 ?? ?? ESKOM chairperso­n, Busi Mavuso, who is the chief executive of Business Leaderhip SA, says “when one sits on a board we sit there as independen­t profession­als charged with providing an independen­t view of the running of the entity and responsibl­e to act in the interest of that company”. | Supplied
ESKOM chairperso­n, Busi Mavuso, who is the chief executive of Business Leaderhip SA, says “when one sits on a board we sit there as independen­t profession­als charged with providing an independen­t view of the running of the entity and responsibl­e to act in the interest of that company”. | Supplied

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