The board of the Public Investment Corporation has placed chief executive Patrick Dlamini on precautionary suspension, according to information obtained by the Mail & Guardian, with nine of the corporation’s eleven board members voting in favour of the move. The decision marks the most serious escalation yet in a governance crisis that has consumed Africa’s largest asset manager for much of the past month, and it comes without any public statement from the PIC itself as of Monday evening.
The suspension follows a chain of events tracing back to a long-running dispute over Lanseria Airport, an asset in which the PIC financed a black economic empowerment stake more than a decade ago. That stake, held by businessman Kagiso Matjila’s company Acapulco Trade and Invest 164, ended in default, a PIC decision to enforce its security rights, and ultimately arbitration. The tribunal ruled against the PIC, which paid the award. Matjila has argued repeatedly that the matter was thereby settled beyond further challenge.
Under Dlamini, however, the PIC commissioned PwC to conduct a forensic review of the transaction and the arbitration outcome, a decision the corporation has defended as necessary to protect the Government Employees Pension Fund’s interests. A whistleblower complaint lodged in June alleged that Dlamini authorised the PwC appointment without a supporting board resolution, and separately accused him of failing to manage conflicts of interest linked to his past directorships and to infrastructure investment firm Harith General Partners.
| Date | Development |
|---|---|
| 9 June 2026 | Whistleblower complaint lodged against Dlamini |
| 20 June 2026 | Draft PwC forensic report, flagging debt-calculation issues, obtained by the M&G |
| 21 June 2026 | Chairperson David Masondo refers Lanseria matter to the SIU |
| 26 June 2026 | Matjila files R900 million damages summons against Dlamini |
| 13 July 2026 | Board votes to place Dlamini on precautionary suspension |
The draft PwC report, seen by this publication, identified what it described as multiple calculation and application errors in the debt balance underpinning the original settlement. Those findings appear to have shaped chairperson David Masondo’s subsequent decision to refer aspects of the roughly R300 million transaction to the Special Investigating Unit, despite external legal advice suggesting limited prospects of successfully reopening the arbitration award.
Matjila has since gone further, filing a R900 million damages claim in the Gauteng High Court that names Dlamini personally rather than the PIC, arguing that the chief executive acted beyond his delegated authority in commissioning the PwC probe after a final award had already been paid. The suspension does not resolve that litigation, nor does it constitute a finding of guilt against Dlamini, who has been given an opportunity to respond under the PIC’s internal processes.
The episode adds to a difficult recent history for the PIC, which manages roughly R3.6 trillion on behalf of 1.3 million public servants through the GEPF, and has previously suspended former chief investment officer Kabelo Rikhotso and unlisted portfolio head Thabiso Moshikara. Parliamentary data shows the corporation has committed around R67 billion to nearly 150 unlisted investments since 2005, with at least 78 of those recording partial or total losses. Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana met the board last month as concerns mounted over both the Lanseria affair and the wider unlisted portfolio’s performance.
With Dlamini now sidelined pending the outcome of the board’s process, attention turns to who will steer the PIC through the SIU referral, the Matjila litigation and the finalisation of the PwC report, all while the corporation insists its core investment mandate remains unaffected.
