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Suspended PIC executive Vuyani Hako under scrutiny for R4.5m in ‘suspicious transactions’

The Public Investment Corporation’s chief operating officer, Vuyani Hako, has been on suspension since June 2022. Now, amaBhungane can reveal that, among other allegations, a lifestyle audit revealed more than R4.5-million in unexplained transfers to Hako’s home loan accounts.
Suspended PIC executive Vuyani Hako under scrutiny for R4.5m in ‘suspicious transactions’ Suspended PIC chief operating officer Vuyani Hako. (Photo: Supplied)



Forensic investigators appointed by the state-owned asset manager, the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), have recommended reporting suspended chief operating officer Vuyani Hako to the police. 

This comes after a lifestyle audit, triggered by a whistle-blower report, uncovered “suspicious transactions”, with transfers exceeding R4.5-million into Hako’s home loan accounts.

Hako, who occupies the fourth most powerful position in the PIC, was placed under precautionary suspension in June 2022 after allegations of misconduct were made against him. He remains suspended 18 months later.

At the time of his suspension, the PIC – which oversees close to R2.6-trillion in assets, primarily of government employee pension savings – provided no detail about the nature of the allegations, merely stating that it was in the “best interest of both the employee and the employer to ensure that an independent inquiry can proceed unencumbered”.

Now, confidential board audit committee documents obtained by amaBhungane reveal that before his suspension, the PIC received at least five whistle-blower reports in which Hako was accused of nepotism and corruption. 

pic hako Suspended PIC chief operating officer Vuyani Hako. (Photo: Supplied)



The documents show that in response to the whistle-blower reports, the PIC instituted various investigations, including a lifestyle audit by Fundudzi Forensic Services which uncovered a series of “suspicious” payments and transfers into Hako’s bond accounts beginning the month after he was appointed COO – in December 2020 – and continuing until November 2021.  

These payments – which according to investigators came from Hako and an in-law – went directly into Hako’s bond accounts to settle loans for two of his properties in East London and Centurion. 

A report of the audit committee’s in-camera meeting states that when investigators questioned him about these payments, Hako “failed” to explain the source of the funds. 

As a result of these suspicious and unexplained transactions, Fundudzi recommended that the PIC lodge a criminal case against Hako in terms of the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act.

The Act makes it an offence not to report suspicion of corrupt activity to the police.

The audit committee resolved to recommend Fundudzi’s forensic report and recommendations to the full board for adoption, minutes from its meeting show.

In response to amaBhungane’s questions, the PIC would not confirm whether a case had been opened against Hako, nor did it provide clarity on other allegations made against him, saying only that the COO was “under precautionary suspension while the allegations against him are being investigated and are yet to be concluded.” 

“Mr Hako remains a PIC employee and is entitled to the same protection of his rights as any other employee, including entitlement to confidentiality for any matter or process between the employer and employee,” said the PIC in an email.

“The PIC must follow due process,” it added, emphasising that “it would go against applicable policies and labour legislation for the PIC to publicly disclose any detail or make public comments about any aspect of confidential labour proceedings that are still under way.

“Legally, this would undermine the PIC’s own case and therefore the PIC is not in a position to respond in further detail.”

Hako also declined to respond to detailed questions.

Forensic evidence


A confidential report on the proceedings of a board audit committee meeting in November 2022 sets out a summary of the forensic auditor’s case against Hako. 

It states that in 2021 Hako paid off his home loans with Rand Merchant Bank for two properties bought in 2015 and 2018 using money he could not adequately account for.

Fundudzi Forensic Services, the company the PIC appointed to conduct a lifestyle audit on Hako, reported that Hako made repayments of at least R1.9-million for the two properties over a few months. 

Over a period of six months, an additional R2.7-million allegedly flowed from accounts belonging to a relative of Hako’s by marriage.

Fundudzi said Hako “failed” to provide the source of the R1.9-million transferred into his accounts; he claimed that the payments made by his relative were for “the rental of his property based in Mthatha”.

But investigators said there was “no agreement and/or lease agreement detailing rental arrangements”.

Suspicious transactions


“The PIC should register a criminal case against Mr Hako in order to determine the source of the total amount of R4,521,905 paid and/or transferred into his bond accounts,” Fundudzi recommended. 

Fundudzi emphasised that the payments were deemed “suspicious transactions and require further investigations in terms of section 34 of the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act (Precca)”.

In simple terms, Section 34 of Precca places a duty on the relevant individuals to report suspected or actual acts of corruption, fraud or bribery involving transactions of R100,000 or more.  

Estate agents consulted by amaBhungane said that the typical rent for houses in Fort Gale, Mthatha, where Hako reportedly claimed he had received R2.7-million in rental income, ranged from R13,000 to R15,000 per month.

This is significantly lower than the over R440,000 per month that Hako received and raises further questions about the explanation he reportedly provided to forensic investigators.

Source of funds?


A separate document, flagged as a “Report of Tax Crime”, was leaked to amaBhungane alongside internal PIC documents, though its origin is not clear, nor is it certain that it formed part of any PIC investigation.

The document speculates on the source of Hako’s extra cash, alleging that “it is very likely that… all or some of the monies are traced from a company called Mazwe Financial Services”.

Mazwe was the recipient of a R180-million payment in 2021, part of a controversial R294-million loan facility approved by the PIC that also triggered a forensic investigation in the same year, but that report purported to find no irregularities in the approval process.

Hako, who was acting CEO, signed the resolution to approve Mazwe’s funding application, which had been struggling to gain momentum within the PIC since 2018.

Responding to questions sent by amaBhungane, Mazwe’s CEO Xolisa Bebula emphatically denied these allegations, characterising them as “false, malicious and unfounded”.

Hako would not be drawn into commenting on the transfers made to his bond accounts but stated that he had not had sight of the whistle-blower and forensic reports referred to in our questions. 

“I cannot therefore be expected to respond to the allegations contained in the report/s which I have never seen or read,” said Hako.

“My attorneys have written several letters to both the PIC and its attorneys raising concerns about my prolonged suspension. In addition, my attorneys also referred the dispute of unfair labour practice relating to unfair suspension to the [Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration],” he added.

Blowing the whistle


Hako, who was previously the executive head of properties, was appointed as the organisation’s operations chief in November 2020. Documents show that after he was appointed as the COO, he remained the head of properties in an acting capacity. 

Before Hako’s appointment, the PIC had been operating without a COO since 2015, when the PIC underwent a restructuring process.

The position was officially removed in 2017 when the board, chaired by former deputy minister Mcebisi Jonas, amended a clause in the company’s memorandum of incorporation that outlined how the COO and chief investment officer (CIO) should be appointed.

When the commission of inquiry looking at allegations of impropriety in investment decisions at the PIC completed its work in 2019, one of its recommendations was that these two roles, with the addition of a chief risk officer, should be reinstated to strengthen governance in the organisation.

The commission, led by retired Supreme Court of Appeal Judge Lex Mpati, found that the removal of the COO and CIO roles had created a “centralised operating model with a significant concentration of decision-making responsibility, power and influence in the hands of the CEO and the CFO”.

But in April 2021, six months after Hako was appointed COO, the PIC received a whistle-blower report through its internal reporting line that accused him of wide-ranging abuses of power. 

The allegations focused on incidents that supposedly took place when Hako was acting CEO between March 2019 and July 2020, as well as during his time as the head of properties.

The authors of the whistle-blower report accused Hako of manipulating the appointment of senior staff members to exert control over investment decisions, among other claims.

When the PIC’s internal audit team looked through the various allegations, it found that a number of them were either without merit or too vague to investigate.

However, a memo submitted to the board’s internal audit committee and signed by the PIC’s head of internal audit Lufuno Nemagovhani recommended that a lifestyle audit be conducted on Hako to determine whether “there are any suspicious activities”.

“The lifestyle audit will inform whether a forensic investigation is required on some transactions or not,” reads the memo dated October 2021.

The Wedge 


The allegations from whistle-blowers kept piling up and, according to a confidential report submitted to the board by the audit committee chairperson, forced the PIC to consider whether Hako should continue to act as the head of properties.

The confidential report, seen by amaBhungane, detailed the proceedings of audit committee meetings held between October 2021 and May 2022. It stated that in November and December 2021, the PIC’s internal audit team received more complaints of impropriety against Hako involving two transactions in properties.

One of the whistle-blower reports was related to a project to refurbish the Wedge Shopping Centre in Morningside that supposedly led to the PIC’s biggest client, the Government Employee Pension Fund (GEPF), incurring fruitless and wasteful expenditure. 

The renovation of the shopping centre seemingly happened without the requisite approvals.  Moreover, a whistle-blower report claimed that Hako “told his team not to inform the GEPF about the matter. Staff were too scared to talk about the matter”.  

Isago


The other complaint was related to the PIC’s contentious decision to buy a 60% stake in an empty piece of land located on the N12 highway between Klerksdorp and Stilfontein (known as the Isago@N12 transaction) for an inflated price of R510-million. 

In its 2020/2021 annual report, the PIC’s client, the GEPF, said it had valued the land at just R178-million. 

In a previous article, amaBhungane shared details about a court dispute involving the landowners, Isago@N12 Development, and a retired military veteran who helped broker the deal with the PIC.

The case revealed a dubious commission arrangement, signed in 2015 between Isago and the veteran, providing for a 35% facilitation fee based on the money the PIC invested in the vacant land.

The veteran’s fees were supposedly for leveraging his “connections” to facilitate the land sale.

The deal was finalised in 2018 during Hako’s time as the head of properties. 

The audit committee report recorded that a whistle-blower report had included allegations that “Hako had struck a deal to pay a bribe of R100-million to a specific military colonel.”

The audit committee resolved to appoint a forensic firm to look into the allegations regarding both the renovations at The Wedge and the Isago transactions, according to the documents.

The PIC would not answer questions about the progress or outcome of these two forensic investigations, nor reveal whether they had found any evidence of wrongdoing against Hako. 

Suspension 


The documents reveal that as early as February 2022, the audit committee had asked the CEO of the PIC, Abel Sithole, to remove Hako as the head of properties pending investigations into the allegations made against him. 

Sithole’s response seems to have been discussed in May, and the report of the audit committee chairperson states that the “CEO noted the suggestion from the Committee and stated that Mr Vuyani Hako will continue acting as Executive Head: Properties as the person he was considering to act [in that capacity] was also subject to an investigation.” 

Unimpressed with Sithole’s response, the committee requested that the matter be discussed with the board. 

A few days later, Hako was suspended.

Disciplinary action 


Hako did not respond to our detailed questions, saying it would not be “prudent” to ventilate the allegations levelled against him through a “media inquiry or a so-called court of public opinion initiated by amaBhungane.”

“I prefer to deal with and answer to the allegations levelled against me in a disciplinary process provided by my employer, the PIC,” said Hako. 

Hako said that he was unaware of multiple whistle-blower reports received by the PIC, asserting that there “was only one so-called whistle-blower report referred to when I was placed on precautionary suspension.”

Hako did confirm that the PIC has commenced a disciplinary hearing against him, which is ongoing. However, he would not elaborate on the process or the charges brought against him. DM

Comments (7)

deonvanvuuren9991@gmail.com Dec 22, 2023, 11:02 AM

He has been suspended since 2022, we are entering 2024 already and he has been on paid suspension. With the salary that they are paid, the loss is already more just in salaries than what he is charged for. Makes no sense, as it cannot take this long to do a disciplinary hearing.

Andrew Dec 21, 2023, 10:48 AM

Abel Sithole’s response to the audit committee is disturbing on a number of levels. Not only deciding to keep Hako on despite the numerous “red flags” against this decision, but that Hako’s replacement was also presently under investigation. Astonishing! My take on this is that the entire executive ought to be subjected to independent lifestyle audits without further delay. Too many unsatisfactory responses for comfort are nesting in this cabal of “executives”.

y.martin118 Dec 20, 2023, 12:43 AM

Time we get the lifestyle audit S starting from Local - national government incl. SOEs....it is needed asap especially with the high levels of corruption

Wayne Holt Dec 19, 2023, 07:09 PM

My my my… amnesia is a pandemic in Africa when it comes to accountability

Andries Gouws Dec 19, 2023, 05:57 PM

Don't blow things up out of proportion! What is R4,5 million among friends?

Cunningham Ngcukana Dec 19, 2023, 05:29 PM

This is the worst gutter journalism I have ever seen in my life. I have the questions that the journalist sent to Vuyani Hako and the responses Hako sent to the the journalist and the article is no near the reality of the situation as one understands it. It is laced with lies and half truths and no full account from the person who these journalistic thugs are besmirching his name from the information they gleaned from the a staff member who was fired at the PIC. The PIC has structures to approve transactions and these journalists do no ask what was the role of these structures and refer to forensic reports that have no legal status at all. The embedded journalist called Tebogo has no ethics at all. He has chosen to ignore the questions he sent to Hako and his responses neither has he asked the PIC about the bid adjudication committee and the legal advisors of the PIC on whose advice Hako acted. The writer because is a legal illiterate does not ask the PIC a fundamental question why has the matter dragged for so long. He has taken on a wrong case and a wrong person and he is goi ng to regret.

David McCormick Dec 19, 2023, 07:20 PM

Thanks for correcting this misleading article Mr Ngcukana. As you know the facts, please explain; 1. Why Mr Hako has been suspended for eighteen months? 2. Where did the R4.5 million paid into Mr Hako's property bond accounts come from? 3. Why the PIC paid R510 million for a property valued at R178 million by the GEPF in 2020/21?

hedley.davidson@gmail.com Dec 19, 2023, 05:00 PM

No one cares anymore . Why - because nothing happens , and none of the looters go to jail . They look at the ' non supply chain ' from initial investigation until incarceration and they all know it is a joke , as at each step of the way people can be paid off to make things disappear .While the charade continues Bathoi continues to ' build capacity ' , by the time she is finished there will be nothing left . I suggest shut down the entire criminal justice system - on second thoughts it may as well not exist as it does nothing anyway .