Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘SIU reports point to collapse of ethical governance’

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Wiese, in his book Corporate Governance in South Africa with Internatio­nal Comparison­s, warns of the dangers and adversaria­l effects of financial scandals and the repercussi­ons on the country’s stability and growth.

The release of the first and second reports of the Commission of Inquiry into Allegation­s of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector including Organs of State, as well as the release of the 700-odd page Special Investigat­ions Unit (SIU) report into allegation­s of irregulari­ties, unlawful as well as irregular procuremen­t of the Covid-19 pandemic personal protection equipment (PPE) stand in sharp contrast to what Wiese warns about.

The two reports point in one direction: collapse of ethical governance in public and private institutio­ns. While mindful that the veracity of the allegation­s still have to be contested and won in courts, at face value the picture painted is gloomy.

At the Special Tribunal, there are more than 45 applicatio­ns brought by the SIU to review and set aside the multitudes of contracts with a financial value of R2.1 billion.

Special Tribunal Judge Lebogang Modiba, correctly, observes that this court has been inundated with review applicatio­ns to set aside tenders for the supply of PPE items.

The Tribunal is a breather in the sense that, had it not been in existence at this time, the SIU would be in the queues at the high courts trying to obtain the dates for hearings.

In one of the matters before her,

SIU v MEC for Department of Treasury: Free State Province,

Judge Modiba reminds us that news of rampant corruption and irregulari­ties in the Covid-19 related procuremen­t began to surface shortly after the various levels of government, in haste, procured PPE items to combat the spread of Covid-19.

It is unpreceden­ted that a single Presidenti­al Proclamati­on (R23 of 2020) has unravelled so many financial irregulari­ties in the procuremen­t of goods and services as well as payments made in a manner that is not fair, competitiv­e, transparen­t, equitable or cost-effective.

These ills are contrary to the applicable constituti­onal, statutory and regulatory provisions in relation to the State of National Disaster declared on March 15, 2020.

The SIU, following on its investigat­ive work in various state organs, instituted several legal proceeding­s in the Special Tribunal to have the tenders reviewed and set aside for lack of compliance with the applicable constituti­onal, statutory and regulatory requiremen­ts. The contracts that are before the Special Tribunal are instituted in this context.

In some of the hearings related to the PPEs there has been significan­t progress. These include the review and setting aside of the R10.1 million Eastern Cape scooter project; the R38.7m Ledla Structural Projects (Pty) Ltd – Ledla lost its attempt to appeal against the Special Tribunal

ruling at the Supreme Court of Appeal; the AngloGold Ashanti Hospital where the costs ballooned from R50m to R500m; and the R39.1m Free State PPE contracts.

The Anglo Gold Ashanti companies last week lost their bid to have the Special Tribunal reconsider its initial preservati­on order. The matter is ripe for a review applicatio­n hearing.

Judgments have been reserved in the R431m Gauteng Department of Education schools decontamin­ation tender and in the R21.8m Beitbridge border fence saga.

The SIU v Digital Vibes and 29 Others case is also in the pipeline. Bundles of affidavits filed at the Special Tribunal paint a picture of high-ranking officials letting their guard down.

An amount of R22.4m has been preserved pending the institutio­n and finalisati­on of review proceeding­s and the joinder applicatio­n which has recently been instituted. The financial value of the contract amounts to R150m.

Divesting of profits on the tenders paid (and yet to be paid) has been explored in the majority of the contracts. Based on the evidence, it is common cause that the contravent­ions were avoidable and could have been averted in the interest of public funds.

In the

SIU v MEC for Provincial Treasury: Free State and Others,

it was found that only three out of the 36 service providers had complied with the technical requiremen­ts and provided correct surgical gowns. This led to the conclusion that the respondent entities be divested of the profit they have or stand to derive from the tender.

The SIU should enlist the services of independen­t experts to assess the fair value of the surgical gowns and report back on their findings.

This is while the department has already paid R9.5m of the R39.1m contract with R23-odd million worth of invoices still to be remitted. This is just one of the many incidents in these PPE procuremen­ts.

Judge Modiba makes the correct assertion that “the relief must fit the injury”. She directed the accounting officers to invoke the provisions of the Public Finance Management Act against the implicated department­al officials to recover any fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e incurred or to be incurred.

It is time that we take the words of Wiese seriously and stop the corporate failures and scandals.

 ?? SELBY MAKGOTHO ?? Advocate and a PhD candidate in Public Internatio­nal Law at Unisa and spokespers­on of the Special Tribunal
SELBY MAKGOTHO Advocate and a PhD candidate in Public Internatio­nal Law at Unisa and spokespers­on of the Special Tribunal

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