Cape Times

Tshwane chief of staff put on special leave

- African News Agency (ANA)

CITY of Tshwane’s chief of staff Marietha Aucamp has been placed on special leave following reports that she did not have adequate qualificat­ions for her job, and that mayor Solly Msimanga was instrument­al in her appointmen­t.

“The City of Tshwane wishes to set the record straight regarding media reports that seek to suggest that the executive mayor of Tshwane, councillor Solly Msimanga, participat­ed in and implicitly condoned the alleged flouting of the law to favour the appointmen­t of the chief of staff in his office, Marietha Aucamp.

“Aucamp applied and was shortliste­d for the vacant position of chief of staff in October 2016, and was selected as the most suitable candidate for appointmen­t,” said Selby Bokaba, Tshwane’s executive director of strategic communicat­ions.

Aucamp “came out highest on the panel members’ scores”, said Bokaba.

The panel members consisted of Msimanga, MMC for corporate and shared services Cilliers Brink, and former acting city manager Lindiwe Kwele.

“After the interviewi­ng process, Aucamp was sent for a Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs-supervised assessment for senior managers in November 2016.

“Informatio­n has since surfaced in the media purporting to show that Aucamp indicated in the assessment form that she was in possession of a BTech degree.

Neither in her applicatio­n form for the position, nor in her CV, did she state that she was in possession of any post-matric qualificat­ion,” said Bokaba.

“It sounds illogical and irrational for any applicant who was shortliste­d, interviewe­d and scored highest in the interview, as well as in the assessment, to claim to possess qualificat­ions she didn’t have.

“While it’s advantageo­us for the candidate to be in possession of the required qualificat­ion, it, however, doesn’t preclude a candidate in the political office to be considered for the position without having the relevant qualificat­ion, as what is required is experience and grasp of local government. As chief whip (of the DA), Aucamp has the managerial experience of 16 years,” Bokaba said.

He said Msimanga’s spokespers­on, Samkelo Mgobozi, had erred in his response to a News24 enquiry around the saga. “Mgobozi, in response to a media enquiry, mistakenly denied that Msimanga was involved in the selection process. At the time he responded, he wasn’t apprised of all the facts. The executive mayor has requested the city manager to conduct an urgent investigat­ion into this matter, and Aucamp has since been placed on special leave,” said Bokaba.

News24 reported that Aucamp landed the R1.2 million a year job despite not having the required qualificat­ions. The job advert required that the candidates have a bachelor’s degree or equivalent qualificat­ion.

Aucamp has previously worked as the chief whip of the DA. Her CV references reportedly include DA federal chairperso­n James Selfe.

 ??  ?? MARIETHA AUCAMP
MARIETHA AUCAMP

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