Reserve Bank asked to investigate banks' dealings with Guptas' Oakbay

25 April 2016 - 14:44 By TMG Digital
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Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago.
Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago.
Image: Photographer: Dean Hutton/Bloomberg

The governor of the South African Reserve Bank‚ Lesetja Kganyago‚ has been asked to investigate whether banks that had business relationships with the Guptas complied with all the relevant provisions of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act.

The request by David Maynier‚ the Democratic Alliance's shadow minister of finance‚ also asks the governor to "order any appropriate remedial action or administrative sanctions" if the investigation determines that "certain banks failed to comply".

Maynier said in a statement on Monday that Nazeem Howa‚ the CEO of Oakbay Investments‚ had written to Mmusi Maimane‚ the leader of the opposition‚ on April 21 this year to request a meeting.

"Unsurprisingly the purpose of the meeting would have been to request assistance in appealing to the banks to review their decision to terminate their business relationship with Oakbay Investments.

"It goes without saying that the request for the meeting was inappropriate and there will be no meeting with anybody from Oakbay Investments."

Maynier said the DA believed it was wrong for Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan‚ Labour Minister Mildred Oliphant and Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane to intervene on behalf of the Guptas in business decisions taken by the banks, and that the matter was best left to the South African Reserve Bank, which is responsible for the regulation of the banking industry in South Africa.

During a post-Cabinet briefing last week‚ Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe said the three ministers would open “constructive engagement” with the banks over the closing of the accounts of "a company".

South Africa’s four major banks have refused to do business with the company amid widespread allegations of state capture.

Radebe said while the Cabinet "appreciates the terms and conditions of the banks‚ the acts may deter future potential investors who may want to do business in South Africa“.

He was careful to note that the decision was made at an April 13 meeting‚ before it emerged that one of the reasons for the banks’ actions could be compliance with money-laundering regulations.

He also said the ministers were not conducting a special investigation‚ but rather an “engagement". He did, however, at one point refer to the three ministers as a “task team".

Pressed for details on whether the Cabinet had acted in a similar manner for any other private companies‚ or whether companies could approach the government to act on their behalf in similar situations‚ Radebe would only say that the government and private companies often interacted‚ during visits and in presidential working groups.

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