Business Day

Food bill for president and VIPs on state jet has cost over R138m

- Andisiwe Makinana

Defence minister Thandi Modise has told parliament that South Africans coughed up almost R139m to feed President Cyril Ramaphosa and his entourage aboard his presidenti­al jet, Inkwazi, in the past five years.

Modise disclosed the staggering catering bill in a written reply published by parliament this week.

But when Modise’s office was asked for a breakdown of the costs, it backtracke­d on the figures she submitted to parliament. Modise’s spokespers­on, Amos Phago, said the numbers referred to the total operationa­l costs of the jet.

Phago said the summary submitted to parliament included associated costs such as fuel, flight clearance and flyover fees, parking, airport handling fees, accommodat­ion for crew, stopovers and refuelling.

DA leader John Steenhuise­n asked Modise for a breakdown of catering costs for every flight of Inkwazi over the past three financial years and since April 2023. Steenhuise­n questioned Modise about a report published in City Press in November that said the costs of catering on board Inkwazi amounted to just less than R600,000 for fewer than 18 VIP guests on a 12-hour flight from London to SA after Queen Elizabeth’s funeral in 2022.

Modise said the flight to London did not fly from SA. The trip was part of a flight from SA to Washington DC in the US, via Las Palmas, for Ramaphosa to attend a working visit to the US at President Joe Biden’s invitation, from September 15 2022 to September 17 2022. The flight left Washington on September 18, bound for London, for Ramaphosa to attend the funeral. After the funeral, the aircraft left London for SA on September 19, she said.

Modise said the catering costs covered all legs flown by the aircraft. “It should be noted that the air force is invoiced and billed for all onboard catering and requiremen­ts for all legs flown by the aircraft and are covered by the catering price.

“Furthermor­e, the London leg was scheduled on short notice, which contribute­d to price increases. External flight destinatio­ns charge all catering in foreign currency, which influences the pricing. It must be stated that the SAAF gets billed for catering even if the destinatio­n changes,” said Modise.

Modise said there were 13 VIPs on board and eight crew members. These included Ramaphosa, spokespers­on Vincent Magwenya, parliament­ary counsellor Gerhard Koornhof and medical practition­ers.

Modise’s reply showed R33.7m was spent in the 2018/19 financial year, R42.4m in 2019/20, R5.1m in 2020/21, R7.8m in 2021/22, R30.7m in 2022/23 and R19m so far in the current financial year.

She did not say how many flights the jet took in the period under review.

Steenhuise­n said: “It is frankly outrageous that these huge sums are being spent on meals for the president and his elite cronies in the air while our children are literally starving on the ground below.

“If anything, it shows how little the president and his government care. It’s wanton abuse of luxury perks and privileges while citizens are struggling to survive.

“The president should be ashamed that so much money is being spent on his comfort while his government has caused so much daily suffering for the people of our country.”

Steenhuise­n said that under a DA administra­tion, the jet would be sold and the country’s leaders would fly commercial­ly, as do the leaders of other countries at the same economic level as SA.

IT IS FRANKLY OUTRAGEOUS THAT THESE HUGE SUMS ARE BEING SPENT ON MEALS FOR THE PRESIDENT AND HIS ELITE CRONIES

John Steenhuise­n DA leader

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