Sa Post Office Ceo Suspension

Loading player...
Tunica joins Kaya Bizz to break down the story and offers insight on the current state of SAPO.

- The SA Post Office suspended its new interim CEO, Lindiwe Kwele, in December 2019, after just four months at the helm of the struggling state-owned enterprise.
- Kwele was appointed as interim CEO in August last year when form er Post Office CEO Mark Barnes resigned citing differences on a forward strategy in relation to the structure of the group.
- After his resignation, Barnes said there was a competent team in place at the Post Office, led by Kwele, which can still realise the potential of the organisation.
- Kwele first joined the Post Office in June 2017 as Chief Operating Officer. Before that, she was Deputy City Manager for the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality.
- Business Day has now reported that Kwele and Mothusi Motjale, The SA Post Office’s head of the supply chain management division, were suspended on 4 December.

Big losses
- The SA Post Office continues to make big losses, which required the government to give it a capital injection of R2.95 billion over the previous financial year.
- There were, however, positive movements under Barnes. He said in the Post Office’s last annual report that the company was progressing towards profitability.
- He added that the organisation was in a sound financial position, with no external bank borrowings or outstanding National Treasury guarantees. The Post Office’s revenue increased by R897 million (19.8%) to R5.44 billion compared to the previous reporting period. Expenses, however, increased even faster. Total expenses increased by R1.43 billion to R6.78 billion, which resulted in a net loss of R1.172 billion.
10 Feb 2020 11AM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Tracking South Africa’s Reform Agenda

Econometrix Chief Economist Dr. Azar Jammine breaks down the latest Operation Vulindlela progress report. We explore where reforms are gaining traction—from energy restructuring to freight logistics—and where bottlenecks remain.
28 Apr 3PM 20 min

Is SA’s Construction Sector Turning?

Economist Dr. Roelof Botha analyzes the latest Afrimat Construction Index alongside Operation Vulindlela’s reform dashboard. With construction activity rising for a second quarter, we ask whether reforms in energy, logistics, and water are finally translating into real‑world infrastructure momentum.
28 Apr 3PM 13 min

Making B‑BBEE Work for Growth

NEF General Counsel Karishma Govender joins us to unpack new research on managers’ perceptions of B‑BBEE. We explore why transformation remains essential.
28 Apr 3PM 8 min

Inside the SpendTrend26 Report

Discovery Bank CEO Hylton Kallner joins Kaya Biz to unpack the SpendTrend26 report, revealing how South Africans are becoming more disciplined, more digital, and more value‑driven.
28 Apr 3PM 17 min

Long‑Term Investing in Uncertain Markets

With global conflict, inflation swings, and rapid AI disruption, investors are feeling the pressure. Horacia Naidoo‑McCarthy from Allan Gray explains how to avoid emotional decision‑making, anchor to fundamentals, and maintain long‑term discipline when markets feel unfamiliar and unpredictable.
28 Apr 3PM 12 min