Ex-S. African finance minister calls for full disclosure after meeting KPMG's Veihmeyer

South Africa’s former finance minister, Pravin Gordhan, said he insisted on “full and proper disclosure” when he met with KPMG International Chairman John Veihmeyer on Thursday over concerns arising from the auditing firm’s work for the country’s tax authority.

Gordhan, who was fired as finance minister in March, was accompanied by his former deputy, Mcebisi Jonas, the two said in a statement sent to Bloomberg via WhatsApp. A KPMG report on an alleged illegal unit at the tax authority, since withdrawn by the firm, was used as evidence in a criminal investigation of Gordhan.

KPMG has agreed to an inquiry by the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants after the firm withdrew the findings of the report on the tax agency, and eight senior executives quit following an internal investigation into work done for the politically connected Gupta family (see "KPMG's South African bosses quit firm after probe into Gupta accounting"). Veihmeyer this week apologized for “what went wrong in KPMG South Africa” before requesting the meeting with Gordhan.

“We shared our strong feelings and disapproval of the manner in which KPMG South Africa has been involved in the validation of state capture,” Gordhan and Jonas said, using a term that refers to pillaging of state resources by politically connected business people. “KPMG has a moral duty to account for its conduct to the South African public and they have to be frank, unequivocal and transparent.”

Former South African finance minister Pravin Gordhan,
Pravin Gordhan, South Africa's finance minister, listens during a panel discussion at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Group Annual Meetings in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016. The IMF warned this week that rising political tensions over globalization are threatening to derail a world recovery already seeking a reliable growth engine. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

KPMG’s public relations office didn’t immediately respond to messages or return calls when Bloomberg contacted them seeking comment.

South Africa’s central bank said Thursday it’s concerned about the quality of internal controls at KPMG. An internal inquiry by the accounting firm criticized its role in advising a Gupta-linked company on the acquisition of a coal mine from Glencore Plc and said four KPMG partners shouldn’t have attended a lavish Gupta family wedding. Sasfin Holdings Ltd. and Hulisani Ltd. have dumped KPMG as auditors and Barclays Group Africa Ltd. and Investec Ltd. have said they are considering ending their relationship with the firm.

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