Audio By Carbonatix
South Africa's special tribunal has ordered German multinational company SAP to pay back 500m rand ($26m; £20m) that the firm reportedly earned through corrupt contracts.
The country's anti-corruption body says that the contracts - signed between SAP and public power company Eskom - did not comply with public finance management laws, resulting in "fruitless and wasteful expenditures" for Eskom.
The two contracts were entered between 2013 and 2016 and were valued at $58m.
The payment order follows a settlement agreement between SAP and the anti-corruption agency Special Investigating Unit (SIU).
The Special Tribunal last week upheld the settlement and termed the contracts "constitutionally invalid".

SIU said on Monday that the payment was part of efforts "to recover financial losses suffered by state institutions due to negligence or corruption".
"The settlement agreement does not absolve SAP or any implicated party from possible prosecution."
SAP is required to remit the payment to SIU within seven days.
In January, the company agreed to pay more than $220m to settle bribery charges involving government officials in several countries, including South Africa.
It allegedly paid millions in fees to consultants in South Africa, despite no work being performed, and funded trips to New York for government officials, including golf outings.
Latest Stories
-
Kumawu MP shares Christmas with aged, widows in constituency
2 minutes -
Even Dangote cannot escape katanomics
1 hour -
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs files appeal asking for immediate prison release
1 hour -
Come again, Bank of Ghana!
2 hours -
$120,000 stolen from Ghanaian financial institution by hackers – INTERPOL
2 hours -
How presidential control has weakened Council of State – Prof H. Kwasi Prempeh explains
2 hours -
Why Council of State must be fixed, not scrapped – Constitution Review Chair explains
2 hours -
A second look, not a veto – Constitution Review Chair makes case for Council of State reform
3 hours -
U.S. airstrikes in Nigeria signal major shift in West African security
3 hours -
Too young to lead? – Prof H. Kwasi Prempeh says Ghana’s Constitution undervalues its youth
3 hours -
Let the people decide – Constitution Review Chair pushes back against fear of ‘young presidents’
3 hours -
Both of these influencers are successful – but only one is human
4 hours -
‘We suffered together’ – Amorim changes style as Man Utd win
8 hours -
‘I have never prayed before in my life’ – Seun Kuti
8 hours -
AU flatly rejects Somaliland bid, reaffirms Somalia’s unity
8 hours
