Unilever whistleblower on terrible cost he has borne for speaking out

Loading player...
It's an understatement to say whistleblower Juan Lerena has borne a terrible cost for exposing abusive practices by his former employer Sime Darby and fellow multinational Unilever. Forced into defending himself in a court action where top legal firm ENS represented Sime Darby, the judgment against Lerena (which we published as a right of reply) proves US president Abraham Lincoln's quip that in a court of law "he who represents himself has a fool for a client." The judgment paints Lerena as un-cooperative, and ruled that he must pay Sime Darby almost R100m. It is also used by the company to show staff and customers Lerena's allegations were groundless. Which is all very well, except that Sime Darby admitted guilt to the Competitions Commission, paid a R30m fine and promised to builtd a R130m plant to compete with Unilever - the company Lerena claims was its partner in commercial crime. In this interview on Rational Radio Lerena gives his side of the sorry saga. - Alec Hogg Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
2 Aug 2019 4AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

Tim Cohen: Doubling down on transformation

The fight over transformation policy in South Africa is intensifying as four of the biggest law firms legally challenge the new legal sector codes. Currency News Senior Editor Tim Cohen joins Irakli to discuss the deeper fault lines exposed by this clash, questioning whether the push for 50% black ownership…
18 May 11AM 9 min

Juanita du Preez: The police generals are falling like dominoes…

The deepening crisis in the South African police force has seen generals toppled either through suspension or arrest. In this interview with Chris Steyn, Action Society's Juanita du Preez comments on the suspensions of the National Commissioner, the Mpumalanga Provincial Commissioner, and the Head of Supply Chain Management, as well…
18 May 7AM 16 min