SAfrica Business Dispute Sets Off Racism Charges

 

DONNA BRYSON

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — A struggle over how to manage South Africa's state-owned power company has opened debates on racism in the boardroom and political meddling in a country where politics and race remain a volatile mix.

Chairman Bobby Godsell and CEO Jacob Maroga were brought in recently to turn around Eskom, a utility that has been troubled for years, but they could not agree on strategy. In a statement Thursday, Eskom's board said both men were out, and that an acting chairman was in sole charge until a new chair and CEO were named.

Accusations are being made that Maroga was being pushed out because he is black. The youth wing of the ruling African National Congress party said: "The time of treating black people ... as subjects, who can be fired as and when the white master wishes is over."

The Black Management Forum, an independent lobby group, said state-owned companies were becoming "slaughterhouses for the black professionals recruited to head them" because white board members did not want to give up control of the economy 15 years after the end of white political rule.

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