Phakeng, Ngonyama ‘mendaciously misled’ UCT, panel finds

4
Phakeng, Ngonyama 'mendaciously misled' UCT, panel finds
Phakeng, Ngonyama 'mendaciously misled' UCT, panel finds

Africa-Press – South-Africa. An independent panel, chaired by former Supreme Court of Appeal president Judge Lex Mpati, has found that former UCT vice-chancellor, Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng, and council chair Babalwa Ngonyama committed “serious governance failures” by “mendaciously misleading” the university about the resignation of a colleague.

The 179-page report was released by the UCT council on Wednesday. New council chairperson, advocate Norman Arendse, apologised “unreservedly” to those staff members who suffered at the hands of Phakeng. She left UCT in March with a golden handshake of R12 million.

A panel was constituted last year following allegations that Ngonyama had supplied false reasons to the UCT senate for the early departure of Professor Lis Lange, who was the deputy vice-chancellor for learning and teaching.

According to Ngonyama, Lange chose to leave of her own accord for personal reasons, News24 previously reported. Lange, however, denied this, saying Ngonyama had effectively pushed her out and told her that Phakeng didn’t want her to continue as her second in command. The report found Lange’s departure was a constructive dismissal.

In a statement released with the report, Arendse said the previous council, chaired by Ngonyama, did not act in the best interests of the university nor exercise fiduciary responsibilities.

The statement said: The university was in the process of taking remedial action against implicated staff and “deliberating an appropriate course of action” against those implicated in the report.

The Mpati report orders public apologies to UCT staff adversely affected during the turmoil that forced them to resign. The report made several key recommendations to deal with governance and specific individuals, among them Ngonyama and former deputy chairperson of council, Pheladi Gwangwa.

The report recommended that Ngonyama’s conduct in failing to perform her fiduciary duty to UCT must be reported to the appropriate regulatory authorities. She is a chartered accountant. It said:

The report also recommends that the council institute disciplinary proceedings against Gwangwa for breaching its code of conduct by failing to recuse herself from one or more council meetings in which she had a conflict of interest.

“And, thereafter ruling that the vice-chancellor and the chairperson of council were entitled to vote on a matter where they were manifestly conflicted, thus demonstrating clear bias or gross incompetence on her part,” it said.

The report states: “To conclude that Ngonyama and Phakeng’s conduct during this period amounted to a governance failure would be an understatement. In an attempt to shield themselves from accountability they subverted the policies and procedures of UCT. Had it not been for the fact that half of the members of council and most in senate acted to protect UCT from their machinations the consequences could have been calamitous.”

Among the remedies for individuals who were wronged by UCT, it is recommended that a written public apology, published on the university’s website, must be issued to the 37 anonymous complainants against Phakeng, referred to in Makamandela-Mguqulwa’s report for failing to act on their complaints.

“In addition, UCT must make available, at its expense, a counselling service for any complainant who experienced bullying by the erstwhile vice-chancellor,” it said. Phakeng said she didn’t want to speak to News24 about the report.

For More News And Analysis About South-Africa Follow Africa-Press

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here