JOHANNESBURG — In what is described as the first …
10 min
3810
How seeds for Cyril Spring were sown at Davos: ...
JOHANNESBURG — Alec Hogg and I attended a briefin…
68 min
3811
Cleaning up countries, cities in a single day: ...
JOHANNESBURG — 'Let’s Do It! World' is a civic-le…
12 min
3812
Helping Saffers tap global markets: CA Sean Pec...
JOHANNESBURG — Sean Peche is a veteran in South A…
24 min
3813
Magda Wierzycka on being a corruption buster, h...
JOHANNESBURG — Over the weekend, Sygnia CEO Magda…
15 min
3814
Hunt for Ajay Gupta: Paul O'Sullivan gives back...
JOHANNESBURG — The wheel has really turned in Sou…
8 min
3815
Nick Binedell: How Zexit happened - and what co...
JOHANNESBURG — Here's a fascinating discussion with Nick Binedell, founder and former dean of GIBS, Africa's top business school. Binedell has productively applied the time freed up by his recent retirement. He is one of many unsung heroes who worked tirelessly behind the scenes as South African civil society fought back against the state capture which set the stage for industrial-scale corruption. I visited with him at GIBS this morning for his insights after Jacob Zuma finally threw in the towel last night. What transpired is a riveting must-listen for anyone wanting to make sense of SA's historic developments in the past week. Especially interesting are Binedell's views on what comes next for the young democracy. Hope Springs. - Alec Hogg
46 min
3816
MUST LISTEN: Peter Hain, all-star panel chart w...
JOHANNESBURG — Just an hour after Cyril Ramaphosa was sworn in as South Africa's new President, I was fortunate enough to attend a special panel discussion on 'Money Laundering and State Capture', hosted by the Wits Business School in Johannesburg on Thursday night. The panel discussion was led by Lord Peter Hain and included star-studded attendees ranging from Business Leadership CEO Bonang Mohale to ANC stalwart and Corruption Watch Chair Mavuso Msimang. All panellists were excellent, but one stood out: Treasury's Deputy Director-General Ismail Momoniat. Ismail is proof that quality public servants still exist in Treasury and government despite the dire Zuma years. His thoughts were rational, clear and inspiring. At the end of the event, he even refused a small gift from Wits Business School, highlighting his integrity. (I'm sure the gift from Wits was more of a thank you gesture and innocent, but the kind refusal from Momoniat was highly symbolic.) As my editor Alec Hogg now says: "Hope has sprung." - Gareth van Zyl
42 min
3817
Potential for SA growth exists if country solve...
JOHANNESBURG — Alex Matturri (pictured right), th…
14 min
3818
12J Suite Spot: Ex-Kulula, Discovery veteran Gi...
JOHANNESBURG — Gidon Novick is legendary in the S…
22 min
3819
Nailing of Phahlane: O'Sullivan bags his second...
JOHANNESBURG — For some months, forensic investig…
59 min
3820
Mining Indaba: What South Africa must do now to...
JOHANNESBURG — The Mining Indaba, being held in C…
21 min
3821
Meet Felicity Duncan: Well travelled editor of ...
A decade and a half after they started working to…