Friday, April 26, 2024 | Shawwal 16, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

KPMG’s South Africa bosses purged over Gupta scandal

1109998
1109998
minus
plus

JOHANNESBURG: Global auditor KPMG cleared out its South African leadership en masse on Friday after damning findings from an internal investigation into work done for businessmen friends of President Jacob Zuma.


KPMG’s investigation into its work for the Guptas, accused by a public watchdog of improperly influencing government contracts, identified no evidence of crimes or corruption, but found that work done for Gupta family firms “fell considerably short of KPMG’s standards”, the auditor said in a statement.


In particular, it acknowledged “flaws” in a report that it compiled for South Africa’s tax service, which implied that former finance minister Pravin Gordhan had helped set up a “rogue spy unit” when he was head of the service.


Gordhan, subsequently sacked as finance minister by Zuma, said the report had damaged South Africa’s young democracy, and that he was considering legal steps.


KPMG became the third global firm to be damaged by work carried out for the Indian-born brothers after the business consultancy McKinsey and the public relations agency Bell Pottinger, whose British business collapsed this week.


Both Zuma and the Guptas deny wrongdoing and say they are victims of a politically motivated witch-hunt.


The Guptas and their companies have not been charged with any crime, but the scandal is one of many that have dogged the Zuma presidency.


“I want to apologise to the public, our people and clients for the failings that have been identified by the investigation,” said KPMG’s new South African CEO, Nhlamu Dlomu.


KPMG said it would donate 40 million rand ($3 million) earned in fees from Gupta-controlled firms to education and anti-corruption groups, and refund 23 million rand it had received for the tax service report.


The Chief Executive of KPMG South Africa, Trevor Hoole, its chairman, Ahmed Jaffer, Chief Operating Officer Steven Louw and five senior partners all resigned.


“I absolutely understand that ultimate responsibility lies with me,” Hoole said in a statement.


KPMG also plans to dismiss Jacques Wessels, the lead partner on audits of Gupta-linked firms, it said. Wessels did not answer a call to his mobile seeking comment.


Andrew Cranston, former CEO of KPMG Russia, has been appointed as interim chief operating officer.


The announcement stunned hundreds of KPMG staff crammed into an auditorium in its Johannesburg head offices and others listening in via video link from Cape Town and Pretoria.


“Everybody is just dumbfounded,” said one employee. “They’re obviously trying to show that responsibility stretches to the top. But right now I don’t think anybody knows what to think.”


Gordhan, one of the Guptas’ harshest critics, lamented the damage done to the credibility of the tax service, an institution that has been vital to South Africa’s stability and economic growth in the two decades since apartheid.


“Whilst there have been personal consequences, the real issue that confronts us is the significant damage to our hard-won democracy, to our state institutions and ultimately to the South African people,” he said in a statement.


Mmusi Maimane, leader of the opposition Democratic Alliance, called for a criminal probe into “state capture”, a term used to refer to the Guptas’ alleged undue influence over government decision-making. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon