Ex-SAA director Yakhe Kwinana fined R6.1m, barred from acting as chartered accountant

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Ex-SAA director Yakhe Kwinana fined R6.1m, barred from acting as chartered accountant
Ex-SAA director Yakhe Kwinana fined R6.1m, barred from acting as chartered accountant

Africa-Press – South-Africa. Former SAA board member and chartered accountant Yakhe Kwinana has been fined R6.1 million and barred from being a member of the SA Institute of Chartered Accountants (SAICA) following a disciplinary hearing.

Kwinana served as a board member at the national carrier between 2009 and 2016, including as the head of its important audit and risk committee.

In a ruling made public on Thursday, Saica said its disciplinary committee (DC) found Kwinana guilty of 13 of the 14 charges proffered against her. One of the charges was withdrawn.

“The DC was of the view that the respondent was not a fit and proper individual to be a member of the profession and that she should be excluded from membership of SAICA with immediate effect,” said the accountancy regulator.

The ruling means that Kwinana cannot practice as a chartered accountant. She may still be able to practice as an auditor, however, as a different body oversees the profession.

Kwinana has also been ordered to pay all Saica’s legal costs in the two-month disciplinary hearing, except for security services.

‘No clue’

Saica held the disciplinary hearing following the publication of the State Capture Inquiry report last year, which criticised Kwinana and former SAA CEO Dudu Myeni for causing “sustained damage” to the embattled flag carrier.

In a scathing assessment, the commission found that Kwinana appeared to have “no clue about some of the basic obligations that she should know as a charted accountant” or “dishonestly pretended” she didn’t know what her job entailed.

Kwinana had denied any wrongdoing in her testimony before the commission. Myeni, meanwhile, was declared a delinquent director in May 2020.

Saica CEO Freeman Nomvalo said in a statement that the accountancy body was committed to holding all its members accountable.

“Saica deals with all allegations without fear or favour. SAICA members who fail to uphold the highest ethical and professional standards compromise public and private sector institutions and the South African economy.

“Saica is committed to ensuring that members operate in the public interest by taking the necessary steps to ensure a fair and equitable outcome of its disciplinary processes.

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