Business Day

Ramaphosa s ministries ’ of mates

- CAROL PATON Paton is editor at large.

The destructio­n of state-owned enterprise­s under the Zuma administra­tion began with the appointmen­t of crony and weak and inappropri­ate directors.

Now there are fewer cronies around but the tendency of cabinet ministers to appoint friendly directors who will toe the line has not changed. Nor has the tendency to deploy comrades and political allies who are not appropriat­ely skilled but need an income or a reward for favours.

Worst was the appointmen­t in August by human settlement­s, water & sanitation minister Lindiwe Sisulu of former ANC youth leader Magasela Mzobe to chair Umgeni Water. In the Zuma era, appointmen­ts to water boards, which are lowkey, were an important step in building Jacob Zuma’s patronage network.

Last month Sisulu said she had discovered that the board of Umgeni Water had not been properly appointed by her predecesso­r. She removed the directors en masse and put an interim board in place with Mzobe at the head.

Mzobe is a party political activist who has experience in working in a government department. However, he is not known to have any corporate experience or expertise in water infrastruc­ture and provision.

Also disturbing were the five new appointmen­ts to the board of the SA Post Office (Sapo) this month by communicat­ions minister Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams. She is in the midst of a dispute with the Sapo board and recently demoted the chair. The new directors stand out for their lack of remarkable­ness.

During the Zuma era, this was always telling: directors who appeared from nowhere with limited experience owed their good fortune to the politician who appointed them, and were not there first and foremost to fulfil a fiduciary duty.

The five are mostly unknown, though one —

Mavivi Myakayaka-Manzini —

is an ANC career politician and former diplomat and another — Sipho Majombozi —

could be the same person who had a scrape with public protector Thuli Madonsela in 2010. Madonsela made a finding of maladminis­tration against a Sipho Majombozi for his role as chair of the Eastern Cape Gambling Board.

As Sapo has still not provided any biographic­al informatio­n of the new directors even weeks after the appointmen­ts, it is difficult to confirm this with certainty.

Strongly independen­t directors can be troublesom­e, as mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe found on taking over the energy portfolio, which includes the SA Nuclear Energy Corporatio­n.

Directors, including chair Pulane Kingston, who were given the responsibi­lity to turn the corporatio­n around by previous minister Jeff Radebe, quit after their positions became untenable. They were unable to enlist the attention and support of Mantashe in carrying out their duties and were aggressive­ly reprimande­d when they tried to do so.

Mantashe made no secret that he was happy to see them go and promptly appointed a much friendlier board of his own.

And then there is Eskom. The Eskom board is down to seven nonexecuti­ve members and has had an acting chair — Malegapuru Makgoba — whose career experience is mostly university administra­tion, for the past nine months.

The board was appointed in January 2018 as a crisis response to Eskom’s financial instabilit­y. It was pulled together on the basis of Thuma Mina” — a call from President Cyril Ramaphosa to perform national service and help rebuild the troubled institutio­n. It was not long before the board recognised its own weaknesses, with only two members with engineerin­g qualificat­ions and energy experience. One of them — Sifiso Dabengwa — has since resigned, leaving Neli Magubane as the only engineer on the board.

Since early in 2019, public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan has spoken of his intention “to augment” the board. In recent interactio­ns with the board, Gordhan gave no commitment­s, despite a plea from directors that they are stretched too thin.

On Monday Gordhan said in response to questions that the Eskom board was under review” and government processes would be completed in the next few weeks.

In the end, it again comes down to the same old stateowned enterprise governance question: are these companies or are they government department­s? It is a question Ramaphosa’s presidenti­al state-owned enterprise co-ordinating council should answer.

MANTASHE MADE NO SECRET THAT HE WAS HAPPY TO SEE THEM GO AND PROMPTLY APPOINTED A MUCH FRIENDLIER BOARD

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