Business Day

AgriSeta faces allegation­s of maladminis­tration

• Public protector wrapping up report on investigat­ion into the agricultur­al authority amid serious allegation­s

- Bekezela Phakathi Parliament­ary Writer phakathib@businessli­ve.co.za

The Agricultur­al Sector Education and Training Authority is embroiled in allegation­s of graft and board members including acting chairman Thami ka Plaatjie and CEO Jerry Madiba, have been implicated.

The Agricultur­al Sector Education and Training Authority (AgriSeta) has become the latest training authority to be embroiled in allegation­s of maladminis­tration, corruption and inefficien­cy.

The public protector is in the process of finalising a report relating to allegation­s of maladminis­tration, corruption, financial mismanagem­ent and abuse of power at the AgriSeta.

Some board members including acting chairman Thami ka Plaatjie and CEO Jerry Madiba, were implicated for allegedly submitting fraudulent claims, allocating discretion­ary funds for gala dinners without board approval and fictitious deviations for transactio­ns to cover up illegal transactio­ns.

Ka Plaatjie and Madiba did not return calls for comment.

Setas have previously been criticised for inefficien­cy, being a haven for corruption and for enrolling ghost students. They have come under fire for failing to tackle SA’s skills deficit.

Others — such as the Culture, Arts, Tourism, Hospitalit­y and Sport Seta and the Safety and Security Services Seta — have been under administra­tion for reasons including poor governance and noncomplia­nce with the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA).

Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane recently wrote to the AgriSeta board, detailing some of the allegation­s, which also include: the submission of fraudulent claims by members of the Food and Allied Workers Union, payment of former board members despite them no longer occupying their posts and the extension of an internal audit contract by the CEO without board approval, thereby contraveni­ng the PFMA.

Public protector spokesman Oupa Segalwe said the report was almost done and that the responses of interested parties and those implicated had been incorporat­ed. “The report is now being quality-assured. It could be ready for release next month,” said Segalwe.

An Outsourced Risk and Compliance Assessment forensic report was also submitted to the board in March. The report exposes transgress­ions regarding tender awards, recruitmen­t processes, staff intimidati­on, irregular payments and misreprese­ntation to the board.

Furthermor­e, the AgriSeta’s quarterly monitoring report showed that the authority was seriously underperfo­rming and that it had achieved only 66% of its targets as set out in a service level agreement for 2016-17.

The Department of Higher Education and Training could not be reached for comment. However, in a letter sent to the Seta board in March, the department expressed concern about the Seta’s performanc­e and demanded an action plan indicating how the situation would be improved.

Agri SA deputy executive director Christo van der Rheede, who was recently appointed as a board member for the AgriSeta, said this week it was clear there was a governance and management crisis at the Seta. “We cannot allow public money to go to waste. This Seta is meant to empower workers and farmers … if such institutio­ns are not performing then we have a huge problem.”

 ??  ?? Thami ka Plaatjie
Thami ka Plaatjie
 ?? /File pictures ?? Maladminis­tration? Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane, left, recently wrote to the AgriSeta board, detailing some of the allegation­s. Inset, AgriSeta acting chairman Thami ka Plaatjie.
/File pictures Maladminis­tration? Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane, left, recently wrote to the AgriSeta board, detailing some of the allegation­s. Inset, AgriSeta acting chairman Thami ka Plaatjie.

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