Sparks need to fly over ANC's corrupt power deal
Paul Hoffman: Emerging from apartheid, South Africans agreed in 1994 to live by a system in which openness, accountability and responsiveness to the needs of ordinary people will be the order of the day. We even spelled out these values as founding provisions of our Constitution.
Now Hitachi wants us to believe it did not know it was getting into business with what it calls an ANC front company as its BEE partner to tender for two Eskom boiler making contracts worth R38.5- billion.
We are also expected to believe that for an initial investment of "over R1-million" the front company will receive dividends of about R50-million over the next eight years, simply for taking up the BEE stake of 25% of the shares in Hitachi Power Africa.
Then we are told that the Eskom tender process has been certified fair by accountants. This was done despite the presence of ANC deployees on the tender committee of Eskom, chaired by Valli Moosa, a member of the NEC of the ANC, and on the board of Hitachi Power Africa which shares directors with the ANC front company.
We are also asked to accept that no political party will benefit from the dividends because a trust, which owns the front company, is obliged to ensure the dividend money goes to the previously disadvantaged.
Presumably, the grateful "natural persons" who are recipients of this largesse will not be members of the ANC and will be required to undertake not to vote, so that the assurances by Hitachi spokesmen do not turn out to be as hollow as they appear.
Meanwhile, Eskom has been caught secretly selling electricity to well-heeled corporate customers at below cost while pressuring the public to pay ever-escalating amounts for our meagre consumption of the same.
Eskom ignores or belittles initiatives to change to renewable and clean energy sources, not because these are preferable to burning coal that destroys our precious life- giving atmosphere, but because Eskom is trapped in a web of vested interests from which it lacks the will to escape. Evidence of secret deals by Eskom is suppressed in parliament and allegations of fraud and corruption are not investigated.
When whistleblowers approach ANC parliamentary energy committee chair Vygie Mentor, she chases them away and also castigates opposition members of parliament for seeking to get to the bottom of the whistleblowers' story.
This is bigger and worse by far than the arms deals.

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Sparks need to fly over ANC's corrupt power deal
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