Bank told to keep Sekunjalo accounts open

South Africa - Cape Town - 10 March 2022 - Civil Society and political parties marchng in Support of Sekunjalo Group to the High Court in Cape Town to stop Closing Bank accounts of Black owned Companies. Picture Leon Lestrade. African News Agency/ANA.

South Africa - Cape Town - 10 March 2022 - Civil Society and political parties marchng in Support of Sekunjalo Group to the High Court in Cape Town to stop Closing Bank accounts of Black owned Companies. Picture Leon Lestrade. African News Agency/ANA.

Published Mar 15, 2022

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Nedbank has been directed to keep the bank accounts belonging to the Sekunjalo Group of Companies (Sekunjalo) open.

Judge Mondi Samela, presiding over the Equality Court matter in the Western Cape, in which Sekunjalo is taking Nedbank and South Africa’s banks on for discrimination, ordered the undertaking until such time as the interdict application against Nedbank is heard on April 8 and an outcome is reached.

Having heard senior counsel’s submissions for the applicants and the respondents, and having considered the issues raised by both parties, Judge Samela said he was of the view that a case had been made for the relief sought by Sekunjalo.

Judge Samela said: “The respondents are hereby interdicted from closing the applicant’s accounts on Tuesday, March 15, 2022. This relief is pending the outcome of the application pending relief on April 8, 2022, and the costs should follow the cause.”

Last week, an eleventh-hour technical objection by Nedbank regarding the jurisdiction of the Equality Court to hear the application brought by Sekunjalo, in respect to the imminent closure of group’s accounts, was postponed following consultations in the judge's chambers with advocates from both sides.

In their refusal to keep the accounts open and which forced the directive, Nedbank argued that Sekunjalo had accounts at Standard Bank.

Sekunjalo’s advocate, Vuyani Ngalwana SC, reasoned that the Standard Bank accounts were not the remedy, as already those accounts were under review and these circumstances hindered Sekunjalo from conducting business or opening new accounts.

Also last week, Sekunjalo took its case against Nedbank and eight other banks to the Competition Tribunal, where the group contended that South Africa’s banks were colluding in their group boycott action of terminating the group’s banking facilities. This, they put forward, was an abuse of dominance or collusive conduct in contravention of the Competition Act.

The ruling by the tribunal in the matter was reserved.

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