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Woes of Africa's Biggest Fund Manager Move Lawyer to Poetry

Woes of Africa's Biggest Fund Manager Move Lawyer to Verse

(Bloomberg) -- Accusations of dubious investment decisions and poor leadership at Africa’s biggest money manager have been staples of a long-running inquiry into the company’s dealings. But never in the form of poetry.

That changed on Monday with the testimony of Pamela Phala, a senior member of the legal department at the Pretoria-based Public Investment Corp. Ahead of her sworn statement, she performed several lines of self-written verse to describe what she sees as the demise of a once-great South African institution.

The PIC was once a pillar of justice that “held scales in its left hand and in its right a sword,” she told three stony-faced commissioners. “But in the course of time, the laws of the land were corrupted,” she said. “Might took the place of the right. And the weak were oppressed. And the mighty ruled with an iron rod.”

Responsible for most South African government workers’ pension funds, the PIC is being probed over allegations of wrongdoing linked to various investments that have contributed to financial losses and a host of senior departures. In line with earlier witnesses, Phala testified of questionable behavior by former Chief Executive Officer Daniel Matjila and his successor Matshepo More, who she said tried to fire her using electronic surveillance on her computer.

The executives wanted to remove her and replace her with someone who would do their bidding, Phala added. This after she started with the PIC in September 2006.

More was suspended last week after claims she interfered with people testifying at the inquiry. Nine board members resigned in February, including Chairman Mondli Gungubele, who is also South Africa’s deputy finance minister. The inquiry continues Tuesday.

The PIC’s legal department was corrupted by board interference and the regulatory framework is haphazard, Phala said, urging the commission to make that a matter of urgency. Ending on a more positive note, she said she believes the PIC will recover and a “new era will bring a new dawn.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Janice Kew in Johannesburg at jkew4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Eric Pfanner at epfanner1@bloomberg.net, John Bowker, Vernon Wessels

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