Daily Dispatch

KHANYILE UNDER THE COSH

Ex-HoD accused of siphoning off some R30m in ‘rigged tenders’

- ADRIENNE CARLISLE and SIPHE MACANDA

Stanley Khanyile, a former social developmen­t HoD in the Eastern Cape, was instrument­al in stripping some R30m from the National Developmen­t Agency budget over two years via “rigged tenders”, according to papers in the Grahamstow­n High Court.

Sacked social developmen­t MEC Nancy Sihlwayi’s name has also cropped up in the case.

Nicole Peters, the deputy director of public prosecutio­ns attached to the East London office of the Asset Forfeiture Unit (AFU), told the court that while Khanyile was manipulati­ng the system to pay the millions to controvers­ial Durban businessma­n Pooven Chetty, he reportedly told staff they had better heed his instructio­ns as he was executing the will of then-MEC Sihlwayi.

The money, ostensibly intended for training Eastern Cape women, went straight into the pocket of Chetty and his business, Umnotho Training and Developmen­t Consultant­s.

No proof of any services ever having been rendered to women by Umnotho was sought by the department, which simply paid Chetty out, according to court papers. In 2017, the Dispatch revealed that Chetty had sponsored some R300,000 towards Sihlwayi’s junket to East Africa in 2016 – the same year the last payment to Chetty’s company was made.

Umnotho

Sihlwayi said she was well aware of the department­al programme that was being implemente­d by Umnotho and that she was aware of investigat­ions around it. But she was unwilling to comment about allegation­s against her in Peters’s affidavit. She said: “I have not been formally accused by the department. It would not be wise for me to comment on this. But I’m open to the justice system to test my understand­ing of those processes. It is not easy to speak with you as there is no legal communicat­ion that has come to my attention. The best thing for me is to wait for any legal communicat­ion if I am an accused.”

Sihlwayi said of the allegation that Khanyile was acting on her behalf: “This is a serious accusation, that a political head instructed and therefore he yielded to the will of the political head.”

Sihlwayi, now an ANC MPL, was one three MECs removed from the provincial cabinet early this year. She was fired by premier Phumulo Masualle under pressure from the Oscar Mabuyani-led ANC provincial executive committee.

Assets worth millions belonging to Chetty and his business Umnotho – including a Porsche 911, properties, bitcoins, gold krugerrand­s and the contents of bank accounts – were frozen over the past three weeks.

The court issued two preservati­on orders, preventing Chetty or anyone else from selling, using or trading any of the assets.

Payments

The orders were confirmed on Tuesday by the attorney representi­ng the AFU, Marius Wolmarans.

The money went to Chetty in two payments, one of R14m in 2015 and another R15m in 2016. Peters says in an affidavit in support of the preservati­on order that the R14m in 2015 was paid in two tranches to Chetty within a month of signing the illicit contract with him. The contract with Umnothi was signed on July 15 2015 and the first payment of R7m was made on July 30. The remaining R7m was paid over in August.

Despite finance chief director Nomboniso Helesi warning Khanyile that the entire process was unlawful and provincial Treasury’s refusal to condone a deviation from normal tender procedures, Khanyile redirected over a third of the NDA’s R42m 2015 budget to Chetty.

Khanyile overcame Treasury’s refusal to condone the deviation by simply approving his own applicatio­n for the deviation. He reportedly told disgruntle­d staff that he was the accounting officer and his instructio­ns were to be heeded as he was executing the will of the MEC, said Peters.

Peters further revealed in her affidavit that just one year later in 2016, Khanyile and the thenchief director in his office, Vuyokazi Sangoni, followed an almost identical unlawful modus operandi and Chetty benefited with another R15m. This time Umnothi itself drafted the tender specificat­ions.

Peters says despite being intimidate­d by Sangoni’s presence the standing committee for bid evaluation in 2016 eliminated Umnotho during preevaluat­ion.

Khanyile and Sangoni then overcame this unforeseen obstacle by simply sidelining the committee and establishi­ng their own so-called “bid evaluation ad hoc committee” loaded with people chosen by them. Its subsequent unsurprisi­ng recommenda­tion that Umnotho be granted the tender was never submitted to the bid adjudicati­on committee as required by supply chain regulation­s.

Peters said the collusion of Khanyile, Sangoni and Umnotho constitute­d a criminal offence in terms of the Public Finance Management Act.

The money received by Chetty from the “rigged tenders” was used to buy a Porsche 911, pay a R100,000 deposit on a Land Rover, buy 52 gold krugerrand coins, a property in Old Cape Road in Port Elizabeth, and R1m renovation­s to a Durban property. It was also later discovered he had some R2.5m in investment­s, R500,000 of which was in bitcoins.

Another R12m was found in a bank account, now frozen.

AFU attorney Wolmarans Tuesday said both preservati­on orders had been served on Chetty. The applicatio­n for the preserved assets to be forfeited to the state would follow, he added.

Bogus company

The Dispatch was curtly informed by a man at Umnotho’s Durban North offices that Chetty was “unavailabl­e for comment” on the matter.

Co-operative governance MEC Fikile Xasa has previously branded Umnotho as a bogus company run by criminals.

Khanyile earlier this year said he intended suing Xasa for defamation after Xasa accused him of siphoning off millions to Umnotho. On Tuesday Khanyile, when asked if he was aware of the case before the high court, told the Dispatch: "I know nothing about what you are talking about."

Asked if he knew Chetty and his firm Umnotho, Khanyile said: "Ey, boet, you know, let’s leave this thing because I do not know what you are talking about. You say a lot of things about allegation­s and I know nothing about it."

Khanyile reportedly told disgruntle­d staff ... his instructio­ns were to be heeded as he was executing the will of the MEC

 ??  ?? STANLEY KHANYILE
STANLEY KHANYILE
 ??  ?? NANCY SIHLWAYI
NANCY SIHLWAYI

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