Eskom has suspended its
chief financial officer, Anoj Singh, on a precautionary basis, pending
the outcome of a forensic investigation.
The suspension, The Times has learned, follows an urgent intervention by Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba and Public Enterprises Minister Lynne Brown.
This was after Eskom was faced with a threat from the Development Bank of SA (DBSA) to recall its R15bn loan if no action was taken against Singh and other Eskom officials responsible for the beleaguered parastatal’s qualified audit opinion.
In releasing its financials last week, Eskom confirmed irregular expenditure to the tune of R3bn, but downplayed any possible consequences from its lenders. But the Times has learned that DBSA’s threat, which was issued in a letter on Monday, was followed by another major bank the next day.

The suspension, The Times has learned, follows an urgent intervention by Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba and Public Enterprises Minister Lynne Brown.
This was after Eskom was faced with a threat from the Development Bank of SA (DBSA) to recall its R15bn loan if no action was taken against Singh and other Eskom officials responsible for the beleaguered parastatal’s qualified audit opinion.
In releasing its financials last week, Eskom confirmed irregular expenditure to the tune of R3bn, but downplayed any possible consequences from its lenders. But the Times has learned that DBSA’s threat, which was issued in a letter on Monday, was followed by another major bank the next day.
Such action would trigger similar recalls from
Eskom’s other lenders, which exposes the fiscus to an immediate demand
of more than R300bn Eskom owes a number of lenders. Two weeks ago, the
Sunday Times reported that Eskom closed the 2017 financial year with
R20bn in its bank accounts.
“It’s a major sovereignty risk … It’s R350bn because once DBSA happens, it triggers everyone else. If they all pull out it means treasury must go and find hundreds of billions by tomorrow,” said a government source on Thursday.
Although Gigaba’s office could not be immediately reached for comment, TimesLIVE understands he held crisis meetings with DBSA on Monday and is currently allaying the fears of other lenders. A DBSA board member declined to comment, but did not deny a letter was addressed to the Eskom board on Monday, instead indicating that correspondence between itself and Eskom was confidential.
On Monday, The Times reported that Singh’s involvement in major deals involving the Gupta family could be traced through evidence in leaked e-mails. Most notably, Singh was directly sent a Trillian Capital Partners invoice for R30.6m on February 11 2016, two months before the company was registered on Eskom’s supplier database.
“It’s a major sovereignty risk … It’s R350bn because once DBSA happens, it triggers everyone else. If they all pull out it means treasury must go and find hundreds of billions by tomorrow,” said a government source on Thursday.
Although Gigaba’s office could not be immediately reached for comment, TimesLIVE understands he held crisis meetings with DBSA on Monday and is currently allaying the fears of other lenders. A DBSA board member declined to comment, but did not deny a letter was addressed to the Eskom board on Monday, instead indicating that correspondence between itself and Eskom was confidential.
On Monday, The Times reported that Singh’s involvement in major deals involving the Gupta family could be traced through evidence in leaked e-mails. Most notably, Singh was directly sent a Trillian Capital Partners invoice for R30.6m on February 11 2016, two months before the company was registered on Eskom’s supplier database.
Trillian, who announced on Wednesday that it and key
Gupta associate Salim Essa had parted ways, sent the invoice again on
April 14, it was paid the same day — coincidentally, the day payment was
due for the Guptas’ purchase of Optimum Coal.
Singh also travelled to Dubai five times between June 6 2014 and December 24 2015 where he stayed in the five-star Oberoi Hotel on each occasion, all on the Guptas’ tab.
Every meeting was either just before or after the Gupta family clinched a major deal.
Last week, Eskom executives finally admitted, after months of public denials, it had paid Trillian a total of R495m, without a contract being in place.
Eskom’s board and Brown’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to questions.
BDLIVE SA
Singh also travelled to Dubai five times between June 6 2014 and December 24 2015 where he stayed in the five-star Oberoi Hotel on each occasion, all on the Guptas’ tab.
Every meeting was either just before or after the Gupta family clinched a major deal.
Last week, Eskom executives finally admitted, after months of public denials, it had paid Trillian a total of R495m, without a contract being in place.
Eskom’s board and Brown’s spokesperson did not immediately respond to questions.
BDLIVE SA
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