Yahoo – AFP,
Kenza BRYAN, September 8, 2017
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| British public relations firm Bell Pottinger was accused of orchestrating a racially-charged campaign on behalf of the controversial Gupta family in South Africa (AFP Photo/Rodger BOSCH) |
London
(AFP) - British public relations firm Bell Pottinger, accused of stirring
racial tension in South Africa, faces administration to save it from collapse,
a company source said Friday.
"We
may well be in administration by Monday," the source told AFP, in
reference to the process whereby a troubled firm calls upon independent expert
financial help in a bid to remain operational.
In a
chaotic week, major clients including banking giant HSBC and telecommunications
group TalkTalk have axed ties with Bell Pottinger after it was accused of
orchestrating a racially-charged campaign on behalf of the controversial Gupta
family in South Africa.
Other
fleeing customers include construction company Carillion, financial services
firm Investec and luxury goods maker Richemont, according to media reports.
Britain's
Public Relations and Communications Association (PRCA) trade body expelled Bell
Pottinger on Tuesday over a campaign deemed "likely to inflame racial
discord".
'White
monopoly capital'
"White
monopoly capital" was one of the slogans Bell Pottinger used on behalf of
Oakbay Capital, an investment holding company run by the Indian Gupta family.
The Twitter
hashtag #whitemonopolycapital is used by supporters of South Africa's ruling
Zuma family, which has controversial ties to the Guptas, to discredit
opponents.
The British
PR giant deliberately created a narrative of "economic apartheid" to
defend the Guptas, according to an independent report, which was conducted by
law firm Herbert Smith Freehills and published on Monday.
By
Thursday, Bell Pottinger chairman Mark Smith told a staff meeting at the PR
firm's headquarters in Holborn, central London, that it was likely to go into
administration.
Accountancy
firm BDO has been hired to look at options including a possible sale.
Various
media reported that Bell Pottinger's Asian division will separate from its
parent group and rebrand under the name Klareco Communications.
The group's
second biggest shareholder, advertising firm Chime, has meanwhile written off
its investment and handed back its 27-percent stake.
Nevertheless,
Bell Pottinger is still "considering all the options", according to
an official spokesman.
The group
has pledged to introduce a more formal review of client work to help
"identify high-risk clients and high-risk mandates", as well as
redeveloping its corporate policies, including for social media, and
establishing a new ethics committee.
'Fall
from grace'
Bell
Pottinger was created in 1987 by Tim Bell, one of Margaret Thatcher's foremost
PR advisers, and is well known in the UK for its links to the world of politics
and business.
British
peers were informed on Thursday that the government has no power to remove the
firm from its register of lobbyists.
Speaking in
the House of Lords, Conservative Party frontbencher Lord Young said that while
the company had acted "unprofessionally and unethically" in South
Africa, the only way it could be struck off was if it ceased its public
relations business.
He also
said that the scandal has had "a very damaging impact" on the
Britain's reputation in South Africa.
AFP's
source said Friday that they were still "hopeful" about the company's
situation, adding that the international response to the scandal in their view
had been "out of proportion".

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