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Sunday, August 29, 2010

There is still no action after audit slams SABC



Auditor-general Terence Nombembe has proved an exemplary example of independence, displaying fair-mindedness in his auditing decisions. No more so than when he found hundreds of millions of rands worth of alleged financial mismanagement and corruption in his special investigation into the SABC.

What a contrast he is to members of the parliamentary communications committee, who insisted this week on closing a hearing with the SABC - supposedly the public broadcaster - over which it has insight. While members of the parliamentary press gallery were squatting on the floor outside of the meeting room - waiting for a court order to end the closed meeting - I couldn't help thinking what a mockery it was to call it a "communications" committee.

What an irony that Parliament used the police to protect the MPs - from journalists! Whereas, they should have been deployed to protect transparency and the public pursuit of truth by MPs.

It is just short of a year since the damning auditor-general's report. Only in February was the Special Investigating Unit - headed by state crime buster Willie Hofmeyr - roped in to probe these allegations. One of the more extraordinary auditor-general's findings was that senior managers had notched up millions of rands of misuse of SABC petrol supplies, some surely requiring vehicles to be lined up all day to be filled up. It makes hiding behind closed doors by MPs deeply suspicious.

It has been a rough year for the SABC, with an interim board appointing - at the eleventh hour - Solly Mokoetle, as the chief executive, just before its handover to a new board headed by chairman Ben Ngubane.

Now it appears that all board members, with the exception of Ngubane, have turned against Mokoetle. He has been given notice of his suspension, in spite of protestations all along by Ngubane that "the factual situation is that all the non-executive board members accepted the new group chief executive", as he was reported saying to Sapa in January.

Then there is the saga of the appointment of Phil Molefe, a former parliamentary press gallery member, as the head of SABC news.

Before she left office as interim board chairwoman, billionaire businesswoman Irene Charnley said at the handover meeting that the interim board's core focuses were to stabilise the corporation after a severe financial crisis, leaving the broadcaster with a deficit last year of R900 million. She noted that the government had stepped in with a R200m additional injection and a guarantee of a further R1.4 billion. It was her board, however, which thrust Mokoetle into office.

The auditor-general's report last year was damning. He found 20 employees were directors or members of 20 companies or close corporations which received payments from the broadcaster to the tune of R3.4m. Few if any heads have rolled since. Four senior managers were suspended but their heads never rolled. What a pickle.

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