Sanef welcomes High Court ruling ensuring transparency
The South African National Editors' Forum (Sanef) welcomes the North Gauteng High Court order last week which effectively ensures greater transparency in the country's business affairs by emphasising that company shareholder lists are open to public inspection (see City Press report).
The court ordered three private companies, in which former African National Congress Youth League President Julius Malema has interests and which benefited from provincial construction and other tenders in Limpopo Province, to allow a City Press journalist to view and make copies of the lists of shareholders or members of the companies, pointing out that refusal to do so would be a criminal offence.
For more than a year, the companies - On-Point Engineering, SGL Engineering and Gwama Properties - prevented the journalist, City Press Assistant Editor Adriaan Basson, from gaining access to the companies' shareholder records despite a judge having ordered them to do so.
On 7 November 2012, North Gauteng High Court Judge Sulet Potterill made a further order requiring the companies to provide the information. The companies had advanced numerous technical reasons to declare Basson's application for access invalid, but the judge dismissed all of them. She also ordered the companies to pay Basson's and City Press's costs.