Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
- Gajima
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Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
www.iol.co.za/business/business-news/gau...-be-probed-1.1290152
Interesting recent article. Might be a good subject for an open debate on TT.
Interesting recent article. Might be a good subject for an open debate on TT.
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- Dave Scott
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
Thanks for post Gajima, hope u are well?
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- Mac
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
Oooh, Jayes is again going to be gloating "I told you so"....
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- umlilo
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
There, not better?
Gauteng’s one-horse race to be probed
May 7 2012 at 05:00am
INLSA
DURBAN 30062011 Winning horse for 2011 Vodacom July Horse Race Picture: SANDILE NDLOVU
Wiseman Khuzwayo
Why DID the Gauteng provincial government sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with horse racing stakeholders to prop up a soon-to-be-listed company with the free transfer of three racecourses, and tax concessions?
This is one question public protector Thuli Madonsela will ask as she investigates how Phumelela Gaming and Leisure, now with a market capitalisation of R809.6 million, was granted exclusive licensing rights to manage horse racing in Gauteng without a transparent, public or parliamentary process.
A complaint has been lodged by the Africa Race Group (ARG) and Phindi Kema, a thoroughbred horse breeder. They have been joined in their complaint by the SA Grooms Association (Saga).
Before the signing of the MOU, the provincial government allocated R17.5 million in the form of a grant to turf club members for the building of accommodation for grooms who were living in sub-standard conditions.
The MOU was agreed between the provincial government as represented by Jabu Moleketi, the then MEC for finance and economic affairs, and the members of three turf clubs in Gauteng in June 1997. The racecourses involved were Turffontein, Newmarket and Gosforth Park.
The assets of the Totalisator Agency Board, the Highveld Racing Agency and the existing clubs were to be incorporated into a new company, later known as Phumelela.
The new shareholders were a racing trust, empowerment groups and strategic investors.
The memorandum of understanding stated that 3 percent of the 6 percent taxation on betting turnovers would be passed on to the new company.
It stated: “In order to bring protection to this new company, it was agreed to investigate the possibility of providing an initial exclusive totalisator licence to the new company for a period of up to 10 years.”
Having been formed in 1998, Phumelela still has this exclusive licence, four years after the 10-year period lapsed.
The MOU stated that if necessary, legislation would be introduced in the provincial legislature to give effect to it.
Phumelela has since taken over all the racecourses in seven provinces through this corporatisation process.
Kema and ARG want to buy the Arlington racecourse, in Port Elizabeth, but have objected to Phumelela’s reported R50 million asking price. They said the company paid only R1 for the asset.
Ian Jayes, the former chairman of the Racehorse Trainers’ Association and a critic of Phumelela, says the company used R3.6m of the R17.5m grant to build extensions to the Vaal stabling complex and then put the balance of R13.9m into its accumulated profits.
However, Rian du Plessis, the chief executive of Phumelela, has taken issue with Jayes on this, and Kema and Saga by extension.
He says a legal audit was done on the use of the grant by a firm of attorneys and Phumelela had been cleared, although the finding was that the transaction could have been executed better.
Du Plessis said last week that the arrival of other betting opportunities on the gambling scene, such as casinos, had caused severe financial distress to the turf clubs and horse racing in general, which had until then been the only legal form of gambling.
This resulted in the Gauteng turf clubs approaching the provincial government for relief in the form of reduced tote tax rates. He said as a precondition, the Gauteng government insisted on corporatisation, the introduction of appropriately broad-based empowerment, and that the company obtained a listing on the JSE.
In its interim results to January, Phumelela reported its income was up by 2 percent to R451.7m, in comparison to R443.4m in the six months to January 2011.
Its net attributable profit rose by 11 percent to R35.6m, compared to R32m in the previous corresponding period. Phumelela shares closed unchanged at R10.50 on Friday.
Gauteng’s one-horse race to be probed
May 7 2012 at 05:00am
INLSA
DURBAN 30062011 Winning horse for 2011 Vodacom July Horse Race Picture: SANDILE NDLOVU
Wiseman Khuzwayo
Why DID the Gauteng provincial government sign a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with horse racing stakeholders to prop up a soon-to-be-listed company with the free transfer of three racecourses, and tax concessions?
This is one question public protector Thuli Madonsela will ask as she investigates how Phumelela Gaming and Leisure, now with a market capitalisation of R809.6 million, was granted exclusive licensing rights to manage horse racing in Gauteng without a transparent, public or parliamentary process.
A complaint has been lodged by the Africa Race Group (ARG) and Phindi Kema, a thoroughbred horse breeder. They have been joined in their complaint by the SA Grooms Association (Saga).
Before the signing of the MOU, the provincial government allocated R17.5 million in the form of a grant to turf club members for the building of accommodation for grooms who were living in sub-standard conditions.
The MOU was agreed between the provincial government as represented by Jabu Moleketi, the then MEC for finance and economic affairs, and the members of three turf clubs in Gauteng in June 1997. The racecourses involved were Turffontein, Newmarket and Gosforth Park.
The assets of the Totalisator Agency Board, the Highveld Racing Agency and the existing clubs were to be incorporated into a new company, later known as Phumelela.
The new shareholders were a racing trust, empowerment groups and strategic investors.
The memorandum of understanding stated that 3 percent of the 6 percent taxation on betting turnovers would be passed on to the new company.
It stated: “In order to bring protection to this new company, it was agreed to investigate the possibility of providing an initial exclusive totalisator licence to the new company for a period of up to 10 years.”
Having been formed in 1998, Phumelela still has this exclusive licence, four years after the 10-year period lapsed.
The MOU stated that if necessary, legislation would be introduced in the provincial legislature to give effect to it.
Phumelela has since taken over all the racecourses in seven provinces through this corporatisation process.
Kema and ARG want to buy the Arlington racecourse, in Port Elizabeth, but have objected to Phumelela’s reported R50 million asking price. They said the company paid only R1 for the asset.
Ian Jayes, the former chairman of the Racehorse Trainers’ Association and a critic of Phumelela, says the company used R3.6m of the R17.5m grant to build extensions to the Vaal stabling complex and then put the balance of R13.9m into its accumulated profits.
However, Rian du Plessis, the chief executive of Phumelela, has taken issue with Jayes on this, and Kema and Saga by extension.
He says a legal audit was done on the use of the grant by a firm of attorneys and Phumelela had been cleared, although the finding was that the transaction could have been executed better.
Du Plessis said last week that the arrival of other betting opportunities on the gambling scene, such as casinos, had caused severe financial distress to the turf clubs and horse racing in general, which had until then been the only legal form of gambling.
This resulted in the Gauteng turf clubs approaching the provincial government for relief in the form of reduced tote tax rates. He said as a precondition, the Gauteng government insisted on corporatisation, the introduction of appropriately broad-based empowerment, and that the company obtained a listing on the JSE.
In its interim results to January, Phumelela reported its income was up by 2 percent to R451.7m, in comparison to R443.4m in the six months to January 2011.
Its net attributable profit rose by 11 percent to R35.6m, compared to R32m in the previous corresponding period. Phumelela shares closed unchanged at R10.50 on Friday.
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- oscar
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- umlilo
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
1.
The corporatization was Jabu’s idea as ‘ANC policy to corporatise’;
2.
The horseracing industry was never in dire straits at the time of corporatization; it was the perceived threat from other gambling forms that it invented the bogeyman. In fact, at the time before coroporatisation, there was over R40-million in the Highveld Horseracing trust. Despite requests, the last financial statements were not given to the Gauteng Gambling Board.
An exrtemely convincing case was made for funds to be released for the Newmarket lighting which ended up in the trash bin in no time!
3.
The Gauteng Gambling Board’s sub-committee on horseracing (on which I served) did not approve corporatization. Rather, it supported the idea of the tax break and the industry opening its doors to all and sundry stake-holders) majority black punters). It also suggested that blacks be subsidized for 10 years to become owners, trainers, etc within the industry to reflect our country's demographics;
4.
The MOU has been totally under-mined; there was to be transformation and a strategic partner to run the operation, entirely separate from the stake-holders (RA, NHRA, TBA, Phumelela, etc).
5.
The old Transvaal Ordinance stated clearly that assets gained at the expense of taxpayers such as sports facilities, if liquidated, such income was to accrue to another code of sports. The industry was never liquidated; so, why were the racetracks disposed (under questionable circumstances)?
6.
Where are the blacks within the industry (besides their handful of praise-singing Indians) at the forefront of the industry? Is there a single black CEO?
7.
I was offered a bribe of R50 000 by a senior negotiator not to oppose corporatization (this was repeated in the presence of former Indian trainer Anil Maharaj at Turffontein). Who else was offered bribes? Is that why corporatization was pushed through?
Or, was Jabu misled by the industry like how Sanral allegedly misled Transport Minister and the public about E-Tolling?
Interesting days ahead!!!!
The corporatization was Jabu’s idea as ‘ANC policy to corporatise’;
2.
The horseracing industry was never in dire straits at the time of corporatization; it was the perceived threat from other gambling forms that it invented the bogeyman. In fact, at the time before coroporatisation, there was over R40-million in the Highveld Horseracing trust. Despite requests, the last financial statements were not given to the Gauteng Gambling Board.
An exrtemely convincing case was made for funds to be released for the Newmarket lighting which ended up in the trash bin in no time!
3.
The Gauteng Gambling Board’s sub-committee on horseracing (on which I served) did not approve corporatization. Rather, it supported the idea of the tax break and the industry opening its doors to all and sundry stake-holders) majority black punters). It also suggested that blacks be subsidized for 10 years to become owners, trainers, etc within the industry to reflect our country's demographics;
4.
The MOU has been totally under-mined; there was to be transformation and a strategic partner to run the operation, entirely separate from the stake-holders (RA, NHRA, TBA, Phumelela, etc).
5.
The old Transvaal Ordinance stated clearly that assets gained at the expense of taxpayers such as sports facilities, if liquidated, such income was to accrue to another code of sports. The industry was never liquidated; so, why were the racetracks disposed (under questionable circumstances)?
6.
Where are the blacks within the industry (besides their handful of praise-singing Indians) at the forefront of the industry? Is there a single black CEO?
7.
I was offered a bribe of R50 000 by a senior negotiator not to oppose corporatization (this was repeated in the presence of former Indian trainer Anil Maharaj at Turffontein). Who else was offered bribes? Is that why corporatization was pushed through?
Or, was Jabu misled by the industry like how Sanral allegedly misled Transport Minister and the public about E-Tolling?
Interesting days ahead!!!!
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- PeeKay
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
very interesting to read
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- Dave Scott
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
A bit of the subject but.......
South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) on Tuesday announced the resignation of its CEO Nazir Alli, less than two weeks after a High Court ruling brought the Gauteng e-tolling system to a halt.
South African National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) on Tuesday announced the resignation of its CEO Nazir Alli, less than two weeks after a High Court ruling brought the Gauteng e-tolling system to a halt.
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- PeeKay
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
scotia Wrote:
> A bit of the subject but.......
>
> South African National Roads Agency Limited
> (Sanral) on Tuesday announced the resignation of
> its CEO Nazir Alli, less than two weeks after a
> High Court ruling brought the Gauteng e-tolling
> system to a halt.
Even more interesting.......I smell a rat! I wonder if he wanted to pocket the taxpayers' money. I bet he was going to be one of the "beneficiaries".
> A bit of the subject but.......
>
> South African National Roads Agency Limited
> (Sanral) on Tuesday announced the resignation of
> its CEO Nazir Alli, less than two weeks after a
> High Court ruling brought the Gauteng e-tolling
> system to a halt.
Even more interesting.......I smell a rat! I wonder if he wanted to pocket the taxpayers' money. I bet he was going to be one of the "beneficiaries".
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- Greg Murrell
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
umlilo Wrote:
>
> Interesting days ahead!!!!
I thought you were supposed to be taking it easy Umlilo!
This will only get your blood pressure up, but it looks like
you might soon be telling me "told you so".
>
> Interesting days ahead!!!!
I thought you were supposed to be taking it easy Umlilo!
This will only get your blood pressure up, but it looks like
you might soon be telling me "told you so".
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- Bob Brogan
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
Umilio ,if you ken Mrs Kema ask her to join please...
Ian Jayes sent us a mail saying he was having problems joining the other week,but never answered our mail when we asked what his problem was.So if your reading this and would like a log on contact me @ bob@africanbettingclan.com
Ian Jayes sent us a mail saying he was having problems joining the other week,but never answered our mail when we asked what his problem was.So if your reading this and would like a log on contact me @ bob@africanbettingclan.com
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- Alcaponee
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Re: Re: Gauteng's one horse race to be probed
13 years 4 weeks ago
Good to see you back and on "Fire" Umlilo. Trust you have recovered well from your health scare.
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