Venalor received over R7 million from the Lottery, but neither the company nor the NLC will say what projects were funded by the Lottery.
The directors of aย mystery non-profit companyย which has received more than R7-million in Lottery funding have refused to say what the company does.
Carol Bouwer, a former Generations actress and talk show host turned businesswoman, is one of three directors of Venalor NPC. The other two directors are Athina Christians and Hazel Sithole. Venalor received R4.7 million in Lottery funding in the 2018/2019 financial year, and R2 million and R292,300 respectively in August and November 2019.
COMPANY RECEIVES R7 MILLION IN NATIONAL LOTTERY COMMISSION FUNDING
The company also received a R100,000 grant from the National Lotteries Commission (NLC) Covid-19 relief fund, intended to help non-profit companies โstruggling to stay afloat during this timeโ.
That means that Venalor received a total of R7,064,480 between 2018 and 2020.
But it is unclear what Venalor, which was registered as a non-profit company in 2012, does. GroundUp has searched the Internet using multiple search engines and have found no website for the company or any online activity or accounts in its name on social media platforms. We have attempted to visit the companyโs premises, but security guards told us we had to make an appointment.
Responding via WhatsApp, Bouwer failed to answer questions sent to her by email. These included queries about the type of business Venalor is engaged in, a request for links to the companyโs website and social media accounts, and links to any online publicity about the funded projects. Bouwer was also requested to share the questions with her fellow directors, but neither responded.
Bouwer said only: โโฆwe have signed a grant agreement with the NLC, so everything about our projects is contained in the progress reports we have submitted to NLC. Furthermore we not only have widespread media coverage of the funded projects โ all bearing NLC branding so our clients may be aware of the support, but we also use social media to create visibility of their support.
โAs an organization we are proud of our record of being change agents when it comes to the arts, women empowerment, and support towards marginalised groups, including the LGBTIQ + communities.
โWith regards to the Relief Fund for the distressed organisations, we refer you to theย call for the relief fundย by [the] NLC and its purposes.โ
CAROL BOUWER DIRECTOR AT LOTTERY FUNDED VENMOR
When GroundUp repeated our request for further information on Venalor, Bouwer did not reply.
Questions emailed by GroundUp to Ndivhuho Mafela, the NLCโs head of communications, were ignored. These included a request for details of the Venalor projects funded by the Lottery. Receipts showing the email had been read were received from both Mafela and Gugulethu Yako, the NLCโs legal manager.
According to Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) records, Venalor shares premises with Carol Bouwer Productions and several other of Bouwerโs companies in a listed building in Church Square in Cape Town.
Bouwer is an active director of 24 different companies involved in a variety of activities, according to the CIPC. These includeย TV productions and events planning, luxury goods likeย designer handbagsย and bespokeย cutlery,ย arts awards, and trade and investment companies.
BOUWER RECEIVED โSCATHING PUBLIC PROTECTOR REPORTโ
Carol Bouwer Productions featured in a scathingย Public Protector Reportย into a R70 million splurge on memorial services for Nelson Mandela in Mpumalanga after his death in 2013, which Bouwerโs company organised. Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane found that while the company was paid R44.2 million and had paid other service providers, there was no evidence to show how much these had received.
Mkwebane found that the Mpumalanga Office of the Premier โirregularly appointedโ Carol Bouwer Productions and ruled that โthe entireโ R70 million spent on the memorials was โirregularโ as Treasury guidelines and theย Public Finance Management Actย had been breached. In addition, Carol Brouwer Productions had never received an official letter of appointment.
In 2015 City Pressย reportedย how Mpumalanga director-general Nonhlanhla Mkize had appointed Carol Bouwer Productions, which had charged R8.2 million for the main event alone. Other charges by the company included R2.9 million for โinfrastructureโ, R1.4 million for audio, a R2.3 million management fee, and a R782 000 โcontingency feeโ. Carol Bouwer Productions also claimed R3.6 million for 100 000 T-shirts and R2.1 million for 500 000 bottles of water.
Despite the Hawks saying in 2016 that they wouldย investigateย the Mpumalanga memorial events, three years laterย no action had been takenย against anyone.