Daily Dispatch

7-year fraud probe goes up in smoke

Fire at OTP hits supply chain inquiry

- By ASANDA NINI

AFIRE that destroyed documents at the Office of the Premier (OTP) in Bhisho has compromise­d a sevenyear probe into supply chain irregulari­ties in various government department­s.

On Friday afternoon employees of the OTP had to be evacuated after the fire engulfed the archives section of the building, causing widespread panic.

The facility stored thousands of supply chain management documents while undergoing digital scanning for archiving, and the fire wiped out almost all evidence of irregulari­ties.

Premier Phumulo Masualle was in Johannesbu­rg attending the ANC National Policy Conference at the time.

The fire broke out hours after Gauteng premier David Makhura’s offices went up in flames.

It is understood that most of the documents related to irregular expenditur­e by provincial government department­s and municipali­ties.

The OTP yesterday confirmed that some of the charred documents formed part of directorge­neral Marion Mbina-Mthembu’s investigat­ion into possible irregulari­ties in procuremen­t by the government.

The investigat­ion was focused on transgress­ions committed since 2010.

This was confirmed yesterday by provincial government spokesman Sonwabo Mbananga.

“An assessment as to the impact the fire is likely to have on the [investigat­ions] is being undertaken.

“It will become clearer in the coming days,” said Mbananga.

Some of the reported irregular expenditur­e committed in recent years includes millions spent on the Nelson Mandela memorial and funeral in 2013 without processes being followed.

The O R Tambo district municipali­ty was recently named by auditor-general Kimi Makwetu as one of the biggest culprits of irregular expenditur­e.

This after they incurred R1.4billion irregular expenditur­e since 2012 and also spent millions during the Nelson Mandela funeral on, among other purchases, a generator and R400 000 on food and water against Treasury orders.

The Dispatch reported in 2014 that an investigat­ion was launched by the department of cooperativ­e governance into allegation­s that mayor Nomakhosaz­ana Meth entertaine­d and catered for more than 100 people at Mike’s Kitchen in Mthatha.

Masualle yesterday together with provincial police commission­er Lieutenant-General Liziwe Ntshinga assessed the damage yesterday. Speaking to the media afterwards, Masualle said he had to rush back from Gauteng “so that I could make sense of and visualise what exactly had happened”.

“We are worried about the informatio­n that has been lost because all informatio­n stored is critical to government as it speaks to all our activities.

“We are now in the age where we have to give account of all the things we do and the documents are a repository of that informatio­n.

“When documents are lost or damaged to fire in the way we have lost these ones, then it impacts negatively on our ability to account,” said Masualle.

Masualle refused to be drawn into commenting if the fire could be related to the probes.

“At this moment I would not reveal who was being investigat­ed, but, as you may know, from the last three audit reports from the auditor-general, we have had instances of irregular expenditur­e which we had to investigat­e,” said Masualle.

He said he was unable to determine whether the fire was related to the investigat­ions or not.

“It could have been an accident or deliberate, who knows”.

He said he hoped the investigat­ions would not be affected “but we cannot be pointing fingers at anybody until investigat­ions are complete.”

After assessing the damage Masualle said it was amazing no major casualties were reported.

He said police were “hard at work trying to piece together what could have been the cause”.

The premier said his office was in a process of storing some of the documents electronic­ally and he was hopeful some of the documents could be retrieved from electronic storage.

He said he found it “odd” that his office caught fire the same day Makhura’s office caught fire.

Most staff members remained locked out of their offices yesterday and were expected to be out for the remainder of the week while investigat­ions progressed.

Masualle said he would arrange with the department of public works for alternativ­e accommodat­ion for staff.

Staff were sent text messages telling them not to return to work “until further notice because of a possible smoke inhalation and the fact that the precinct has been cordoned off by police”.

Masualle said he was hopeful that closed-circuit television footage would help determine the cause of the fire.

Ntshinga said a police team of video, forensics and fingerprin­t experts, as well as the dog unit, were combing the scene to identify the cause of the fire. —

 ?? Picture: RANDELL ROSKRUGE ?? SEARCHING FOR CLUES: Premier Phumulo Masualle, centre, seen here with his advisor Sithembele Mase and spokesman Sonwabo Mbananga inspecting the damage caused by the fire that engulfed a storage room in his office on Friday. Some of the documents that...
Picture: RANDELL ROSKRUGE SEARCHING FOR CLUES: Premier Phumulo Masualle, centre, seen here with his advisor Sithembele Mase and spokesman Sonwabo Mbananga inspecting the damage caused by the fire that engulfed a storage room in his office on Friday. Some of the documents that...

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