Thierry Tanoh: major stakeholder wants him sacked
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The main shareholder in Ecobank , one of the biggest banks in sub-Saharan
Africa, called on Saturday for its Ivorian chief executive Thierry Tanoh to be
dismissed immediately.
According to reports by Rueters, the South African government-owned Public Investment Corporation’s (PIC)
demand was made in a letter to the interim chairman of the bank, which is
headquartered in Togo and is listed in Nigeria and Ghana and on the West African
regional bourse BRVM.
Four senior executives called several weeks ago for Tanoh to step down, and
the letter raises the pressure on him ahead of Monday’s extraordinary general
meeting of the bank, although his position is not on the official agenda.
It lists a series of allegations, including that Tanoh took a unilateral
decision to dismiss finance director Laurence do Rego, contrary to a decision by
the board. Tanoh did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Interim chairman Andre Siaka told Reuters he would respond to the letter,
which was signed by Daniel Matjila, the chief investment officer of the PIC.
Matjila is one of 12 directors on Ecobank’s board.
“We … request the chairman to persuade the GCEO (Tanoh) to resign with
immediate effect failing which his contract will be terminated as soon as the
Board is in the position to meet and discuss the business of the Bank,” said the
letter, seen by Reuters.
“If we don’t take this drastic step, we may not have a bank in the near
future. That will be the death of a pan African dream,” it said. PIC has an
18.35 percent stake in Ecobank, according to Thomson Reuters data.
Ecobank has assets of around $20 billion and operates in 33 African
countries, giving it an unusually broad footprint and a significant role in
financing economic expansion on a fast-growing continent.
The bank’s profit rose 56 percent in the first nine months of 2013.
FINANCIAL HEALTH
Senior bank officials say most shareholders view Tanoh’s leadership in the
context of Ecobank’s financial health. PIC, however, said it understood that
dividends may not be paid this year.
“Several Ecobank subsidiaries are in dire need of capital to do business,”
the letter said, accusing Tanoh, a former vice president of the World Bank’s
International Finance Corporation, of failing to raise money for the bank.
The EGM at the bank’s headquarters in the Togolese capital Lome is due to
vote on governance reforms including the establishment of a seven-member interim
board with places for Tanoh and Matjila.
The four members of Tanoh’s Group Executive Committee who called on February
13 for him to step down to solve what they said was a crisis of leadership are
on the current board, but would not have seats on the interim board.
A senior bank official said it was against bank regulations to place any
additional items on the EGM’s agenda, which would mean there could be no vote on
Tanoh’s tenure.
Matjila said in the letter that the board had hoped to discuss Tanoh’s tenure
at a meeting in Lome last Tuesday, but had been thwarted by a court injunction
that prevented the meeting taking place.
The letter said PIC was shocked and dismayed over the injunction, which it
described as a “strange tactic”.
It said seven board members supported Tanoh’s dismissal as CEO, which would
constitute a majority. It was not possible to confirm the figure and other board
members did not respond to a request for comment.
A former board member told Reuters last week that seven board members were
likely to vote against Tanoh. The letter also listed other groups who it said
wanted Tanoh’s departure.
“TANOH CAN FIGHT”
At the same time, former chairman Kolapo Lawson said Tanoh, who joined the
bank in January 2013, would defend his position. “Thierry Tanoh can fight his
own corner,” he told Reuters on Saturday.
The letter said PIC’s complaints about Tanoh were shared by directors Kwasi
Boatin and Sipho Mseleku. They included accusations of failure to focus on the
bank’s business, being unfit to lead and bringing Ecobank into disrepute.
They also focused on two issues that have caught the attention of Nigeria’s
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which last August launched a probe
into corporate governance following allegations made by do Rego.
Ecobank officials say do Rego was suspended in August in part in a dispute
over her professional qualifications, and only later made her charges to the
SEC. She left the bank in January and the SEC said last month she must be
reinstated, a move that Ecobank said would be criminal under Togolese law.
Do Rego has declined previous requests for comment.
The letter also said Tanoh had awarded himself a $1 million bonus without
board approval.
Tanoh has said that correct procedures were followed over the bonus and that
any perception of unfairness is false. Tanoh said in September he would forego a
bonus for 2012 as part of efforts to rebuild confidence, given the SEC
investigation.
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