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Tuis » Algemeen » Koeitjies & kalfies » Re: Meer oor Chancellor House
Re: Meer oor Chancellor House [boodskap #116409] Mon, 25 February 2008 17:05
Torreke[1]  is tans af-lyn  Torreke[1]
Boodskappe: 423
Geregistreer: February 2008
Karma: 0
Senior Lid
Hessie, toe ek hier geplaas het wat Steve Mulholland in Daily Dispatch oor
die ANC se miljoene te sê gehad het en vraagtekens geplaas het oor waar dit
vandaan kom, het jy my vertel dis "whitey talk". Plaas eerder wat die swart
joernaliste daaroor te sê het.

En nou, wat sê jy nou?

"Ferdi" skryf in boodskap news:i393s3t9o5i5f64u55a5uu68dnfonh7eol@4ax.com...
>
>
> Uit vandag se Sunday Times.
> ------------------------------------
>
>
>
> New ANC probes old guard's shady deals
> BUDDY NAIDU Published:Feb 24, 2008
>
>
>
> 'Heads will definitely roll if anything untoward is unearthed, as
> expected'
> Phosa warns that law will take its course if criminality is found
>
> THE ANC'S new leadership has ordered a forensic audit of all
> empowerment deals and tenders worth billions acquired by the party's
> controversial investment company, Chancellor House.
>
> The Sunday Times has established that the auditing firm Ernst & Young
> has been appointed to look into the company's books and unravel a
> series of "questionable" transactions.
>
> The investigation, started by the ANC leadership elected at the
> December conference in Polokwane, is also expected to look into the
> roles played by President Thabo Mbeki's inner circle, including his
> deputy, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, and former treasurer-general Mendi
> Msimang, husband of Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang.
>
> In a move that could be seen as post-Polokowane vengefulness, insiders
> say all the party's secrets could be revealed and those who benefited
> could be named and shamed.
>
> One said: "Heads will definitely roll if anything untoward is
> unearthed, as expected."
>
> Some of the big deals clinched by Chancellor House include:
>
> # A 25% stake in an engineering company, Hitachi Power SA, which got
> Eskom contracts worth R5.8-billion;
>
> # A 25% stake in a mining company, United Manganese of Kalahari, set
> up with Russian investors and worth R1.8-billion;
>
> # A shareholding in Continental Africa Gold Resources Consortium,
> which holds 23% of a mining group, Wits Gold;
>
> # A 5% stake in the logistics and shipping company Grindrod; and
>
> # A 10% shareholding in the engineering company Bateman, whose chief
> executive, Sivi Gounden, was also a founding director of Chancellor
> House. Gounden was director-general of Public Enterprises from 1999 to
> 2003.
>
> It has also long been suspected within party ranks that Chancellor
> House was one of the many beneficiaries of the empowerment stake in
> Telkom in 2006, especially after revelations that Msimang wrote a
> letter to Telkom shareholders saying Mbeki had approved the deal .
>
> ANC luminaries associated with Chancellor House include former
> National Council of Provinces chief whip Henry Makgothi, advocate
> Edith Kuzwayo, businessman Tebogo Makgatho, Irene Charnley, now a
> billionaire shareholder and director of MTN, and Professor Taole
> Mokoena, the chairman. Chancellor House's managing director is Mamatho
> Netsianda, who worked under Msimang in exile in London and is a former
> deputy secretary of defence.
>
> On Friday, the ANC's treasurer-general, Mathews Phosa, confirmed that
> the audit was designed to establish the exact value of these deals as
> well as to ascertain whether there were any conflicts of interest.
>
> He said it was being done to protect the party's reputation and
> promote " ethics and good governance in business".
>
> He hinted that criminal investigations might follow if anything
> untoward was uncovered.
>
> "The law will have to take its course," he said.
>
> Chancellor House Holdings was formed in March 2003, three months after
> the ANC's national conference in Stellenbosch. Questions have since
> been raised about funding received by the ANC, with the party lurching
> from one scandal to the next.
>
> Funding was so secretive that Msimang was reputed to have reported
> only to Mbeki - often keeping secretary-general Kgalema Motlanthe in
> the dark.
>
> Motlanthe, now the party's deputy president, said last year he had
> first learnt of Chancellor House when he read about its existence in
> the Mail& Guardian in 2006.
>
> There have been questions within the party about why it could not pay
> its bills when it was involved in so many deals.
>
> Founded by historian Professor Bernard Magubane, the company is owned
> by the Chancellor House Trust. The trustees are Msimang, former North
> West Premier Popo Molefe and businesswoman Salukazi Dakile-Hlongwane.
>
> After persistent denials by company directors, Msimang admitted in
> December that the company was an "investment vehicle" . In his report
> to the ANC conference in Polokwane he announced a remarkable
> turnaround in the party's financial affairs, from an operating deficit
> of R76-million in the 2002- 03 financial year to an October surplus of
> R67-million, with assets and investments totalling R1.75-billion.
>
> Insiders, however, are now questioning whether he misled the party.
>
> In 2005, for example, Chancellor House signed a manganese mining deal
> with a company associated with Russian billionaire Viktor Vekselberg
> in which its stake is estimated at well over R1.8-billion.
>
> Questions have also been raised about the role of Mbeki in
> facilitating the deals.
>
> Phosa announced last week that the party had ordered Chancellor House
> to withdraw from the Hitachi deal with Eskom because of "ethical
> considerations and corporate governance reasons".
>
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