Solidariteit begins legal action and campaign to stop pension capture
12 February 2020
Solidarity has started a legal process to stop the capture of public servants’ pensions. In a letter to the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF) as well as the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), Solidarity’s legal team demanded that the Trustees and the Board of these institutions should not accept the controversial plan to finance Eskom from the GEPF. If Solidarity does not receive such a guarantee, or if a decision is made to implement the controversial Eskom plan, Solidarity will take further legal action, which may include urgent legal assistance.
In the letter, Solidarity called the Trustees’ attention to their fiduciary duties. Solidarity also pointed out that individual trustees and board members will also be held personally liable for damages if they do not fulfil their fiduciary duty. The mandate of the GEPF and the PIC is to act in the best interest of the client. The board members and the trustees may not be influenced by the political agreements of other mandate givers. If goals other than the best investment return for the pension fund member are pursued, they would be unlawful.
If President Cyril Ramaphosa makes such an announcement in his State of the Nation address, it will have an undue influence on the mandate of the GEPF and the PIC. A political gun against the heads of the GEPF and the PIC will mean the decision will not be voluntary; it will be enforced.
According to the Solidarity letter, any step or action to use employees’ pensions to save Eskom or any other state enterprise would fall outside the mandate of the GEPF and the PIC, and it will also be a breach of the contractual agreement with the members of the fund. In no way can an investment in a totally insolvent enterprise be in the best interest of the pension fund member.