SACP: SABC teetering on the brink of collapse: A call to the newly appointed interim board to act decisively

17th March 2017

SACP: SABC teetering on the brink of collapse: A call to the newly appointed interim board to act decisively

The South African Communist Party (SACP) welcomes Parliament’s rapid finalisation of the nomination of five members to an SABC interim board. We urge President Jacob Zuma to formally appoint them as soon as possible.

The SACP further congratulates the Parliamentary Ad Hoc Committee that investigated the governance decay at the SABC. ANC MPs performed very well during the committee’s proceedings and the SACP is looking forward to similar principled resoluteness on all other matters as this contributes significantly to restoring the confidence of our people in the ANC. After years of extreme abuse by successive incompetent boards and a mix of corrupt and incompetent executives our national public broadcaster is teetering on the brink of collapse.

With just six months to lay the foundations for the SABC’s recovery, the five nominees – Khanyisile Kweyama (chair-designate), Mathatha Tsedu (deputy chair-designate) Krish Naidoo, Febe Potgieter-Gqubule and John Matisonn – need to take control urgently and begin an extremely challenging task.

After a brief post-1994 flowering as South Africa’s public broadcaster, the SABC has struggled to sustain its role as our country’s most trusted source of broadcast news and entertainment. Successive boards and senior managers sought to transform it into a market-driven, commercial operation. With the emergence of Hlaudi Motsoeneng as the de facto power at the SABC in 2012, its slow decline accelerated into free-fall, as widespread looting, financial incompetence and the total collapse of anything recognisable as good governance vanished from its sprawling Auckland Park headquarters.

Its financial resources have been looted and wasted to the extent that its monthly costs – including its wage bill – are today greater than its financial reserves. And, because it now costs more to operate than it makes, those reserves are not being replenished:

 

The challenge facing the interim board is thus enormous. It has to:

These are essential activities and must be undertaken.

But the interim board will have to embark on and complete in six months this programme of action to save the SABC without the money it needs. And it will have to do so in the face of fierce resistance from beneficiaries – inside and outside the SABC – of the polluted processes and activities introduced by Motsoeneng and others. It could also face resistance from the hundreds of honest SABC workers fearful of mass retrenchments under an interim board. Aguma has already begun to fan these fears with warnings of mass retrenchments, implying that the blame must be placed at the door of Parliament and others attempting to reverse the destruction of our public broadcaster.

It should be noted here that the five interim board members are part-timers, several of whom have full time jobs outside of the SABC. They are not paid salaries but “board fees” payable only for board meetings they actually attend.

The SACP and the Alliance have been mobilised to provide political support for the interim board by concern for the SABC and by the revelations of corruption and mismanagement by the parliamentary inquiry into the SABC under the Maguvhe and (Ellen) Tshabalala boards.

But the incoming board will also need a rapid injection of financial resources. The logical source for this is a guarantee from National Treasury – much as the first interim board under Irene Charnley in 2010 secured a Treasury guarantee, to enable it to borrow from the banking sector. The Charnley interim board took much of its six months in office to negotiate that Treasury guarantee. With the SABC in real danger of financial collapse, the nominee Kweyama interim board will need money more quickly than that.

Parliament has recognised this – MPs referred to the interim board appointment as “an unenviable task” and “a poisoned chalice”. But the Kweyama interim board will need more than Parliamentary sympathy: it will need concrete Parliamentary support to get Treasury’s backing for a turn-around at the SABC, and to keep the public broadcaster alive while the save-SABC strategy is developed.

Any Presidential delay in appointing the interim board will be seen by many as an attempt to delay the inevitable action against Motsoeneng and his allies, and to support Communications Minister Faith Muthambi’s ongoing attempt to provide cover for Motsoeneng and to maintain her influence at the SABC.

The SACP therefore calls for fast and decisive action to save the SABC and to support the interim board.

 

Issued by SACP