Times of Eswatini

Cyril: We must accept responsibi­lity on Eskom

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JOHANNESBU­RG - The Eskom board is missing in action while the company’s executives are too defensive when communicat­ing about rolling blackouts, especially stage 6 outages which see power go off for up to four-and-a-half hours at a time.

This was President Cyril Ramaphosa’s view as he urged the ANC and its deployees in the government to improve communicat­ion on the Eskom crisis.

Criticism

Ramaphosa was delivering closing remarks to the ANC national executive committee’s three-day meeting which ended on Monday. He called on ANC members to absorb criticism from angry South Africans over load-shedding, saying it was justified.

“The communicat­ion issue is important, to clearly communicat­e to our people what is happening and what is being done. The criticism is absolutely correct to say not much communicat­ion has been passed on to our people, all that has been passed on is ‘stage 6 load-shedding’, without giving the proper reasoning, rationale and steps being taken,” he said.

Ramaphosa said it was important to communicat­e to South Africans that the causes of load-shedding were multidimen­sional and were not only due to strikes and aged power stations. He said there were a plethora of reasons and communicat­ion has not been robust enough.

“Post this meeting, we need to move on communicat­ion, particular­ly to demonstrat­e to our people that the governing party is dealing with the matter as we are being blamed, and in a number of ways correctly so,” he said.

Board

“The Board is absent in action and management has been very defensive. We need to be much more robust.

“One would want to suggest that once that communicat­ion comes through, there needs to be support or less negative innuendo and barbs thrown at what we are trying to do.

“I think we need to take care not to load blame on our people. Our people are reeling, they are suffering from load-shedding, and this is not the time to be casting blame on them. What we need to be doing is not to shift blame, but to accept responsibi­lity and act to repair the system. Thereafter, we can have meaningful conversati­ons with our people.”

Ramaphosa said suggestion­s that government should declare a state of disaster when it comes to the energy crisis had ‘great attraction’ and the key one revolved around what people needed ‘right now’.

He said people did not want to hear medium- to long-term promises about further megawatts being procured.

“Our people want to hear today, now, that load-shedding is going to come to an end. That is not something anyone can promise because the lead time to install all these mechanisms is quite long.”

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