Daily Dispatch

Jack up service delivery – or else

Premier warns of protests spreading to Eastern Cape

- By ZINE GEORGE Political Editor zineg@dispatch.co.za

PREMIER Phumulo Masualle has pleaded with government officials to deliver efficient services, warning that failure to do so will see the protests springing up across the country, spreading to the Eastern Cape.

Masualle was addressing a conference of Bhisho senior managers who converged at the East London Internatio­nal Convention Centre on Thursday, to firm up a strategy to roll out government’s priorities towards next year, which is an elections year.

He said next year’s provincial and general elections would be a testing ground for the ANC-led government across provinces, including the Eastern Cape, to assess whether they have delivered on the promises made in 2014.

“The leadership in government will be severely tested and required to account if we don’t change the situation for the better.

“The growing service delivery protests countrywid­e are indicative of what we must expect closer to next year’s vote,” said Masualle.

His comments come a day after ANC chief whip Fundile Gade expressed concern about the Bhisho government’s failure to speed up the constructi­on of the multibilli­on-rand Umzimvubu water project that former president Jacob Zuma launched 10 years ago.

Addressing the media during his state of the province address earlier this year, Masualle said the project had stalled as there was still no breakthrou­gh on the funding model.

The conference, which was attended by members of his cabinet, senior state officials, including heads of department­s and senior managers of parastatal­s, was held on the day that disgruntle­d people in Mahikeng, in North West, took to the streets and looted a mall and shops over poor service delivery.

These include poor roads infrastruc­ture, as well as claims that there are no drugs for patients in some public hospitals.

He said it was important that the bureaucrat­s attending the conference ask themselves critical questions and say: “What are those things we need to do to change people’s perception­s and bring about confidence?”

Also of concern, he said, were municipali­ties which were not functionin­g properly, and failing to service their residents .

Masualle said, however, he was also aware that in some cases, politician­s also played a role in making such municipali­ties non-functional.

“I’m mindful that at political levels we need to correct certain things that also impact on the proper functionin­g of the municipali­ties and our institutio­ns generally.”

He identified key areas which he said needed to be addressed by the conference. These include high levels of fraud and corruption, the billions of claims for medical legal claims due to negligence in some of the hospitals, and the failure to fill critical posts in some of the provincial government department­s.

Masualle said in the medico-legal claim, there are “no consequenc­es on those who have been found to have been negligent and those colluding with unscrupulo­us lawyers”. —

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