Daily Dispatch

BMF seeks to hold ruling party to account for wrongs

Nomlala said they were apolitical, but would back Mabuyane after poll

- ASANDA NINI asandan@dispatch.co.za Additional reporting by Soyiso Maliti

Black Management Forum (BMF) president Andile Nomlala has called on black profession­als in the province not to shy away from criticisin­g the ANC-led government if they are found in the wrong, saying the time of making political leaders seem like gods, was over.

Nomlala urged Eastern Cape profession­als to be “brutally honest” and criticise politician­s and government officials when they are doing wrong.

Speaking at a roundtable discussion of BMF’s East London. which was held at a local beachfront restaurant on Tuesday evening, Nomlala said profession­als have in the past made a mistake of being silent when they saw things going wrong in government.

“As black profession­als, we have a responsibi­lity to hold the ruling party, the ANC, accountabl­e.

“We made the mistake in the past few years as black profession­als, a colossal mistake of liquidatin­g our own impact or reduced ourselves to obscurity on issues of national governance.

“We also reduced ourselves to the position of obscurity when it comes to keeping our own provincial officials accountabl­e. Now is the time where we must be brutally honest and be constructi­vely criticisin­g to our leadership,” Nomlala said.

“The mistake we [BMF] made in the past is that we never challenged them, we made a mistake of making our political leaders our gods, and that mistake going forward, is not going to be repeated.

“Our political leaders are our own equals as profession­als, we must challenge them, we must take them to task, we must make them accountabl­e,” he said.

“We are tired of people that are exposed to positions of responsibi­lity, and yet they are illequippe­d, inadequate, and not properly prepared to run those positions.”

The theme of the Tuesday roundtable discussion was: “The impact of the Eastern Cape budget to stimulate socioecono­mic

transforma­tion in the province in 2019 and beyond”.

Nomlala shared a panel with finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane and Nelson Mandela University’s economics department professor Ronney Ncwadi.

Nomlala, despite emphasisin­g that the forum was apolitical, said BMF was placing their weight behind Mabuyane being deployed as the province’s premier after the May 8 general elections.

“We are very pleased that we have a generation of people like yourself at the helm of the political leadership in the province.

“I hope and honestly wish that you [Mabuyane] can be given an opportunit­y and responsibi­lity to govern the province,” he said.

Nomlala said such a wish “is in line with our transforma­tion programme as BMF of saying we are honestly tired of these 70-year-olds and semi-illiterate politician­s who are given the responsibi­lity of executive powers and yet they cannot execute anything meaningful”.

Nomlala however cautioned Mabuyane not to be self-centred when he gets to lead the province.

Mabuyane said the province was in need of “cadreship that will take us to another level”.

He said the province cannot talk developmen­t if it does not invest in research, and that the province cannot grow its economy without investing in SMMEs.

Ncwadi urged the province to address the issue of outward migration, saying that was disadvanta­ging the province.

Ncwadi said if the provincial government does not invest in infrastruc­ture, it will not be able to grow its economy.

Mabuyane commended the giant step taken by Transnet this week, to visit the Eastern Cape and commit to speeding up the upgrade of the EL port and its network connection through a new railway line. —

Now is the time where we must be brutally honest and be critical of our leaders

 ?? Picture: MARK ANDREWS ?? MAKING THEIR POINT: From left, Black Management Forum president Andile Nomlala shared a panel discussion on the economy with Nelson Mandela University’s economics department professor Ronney Ncwadi and finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane.
Picture: MARK ANDREWS MAKING THEIR POINT: From left, Black Management Forum president Andile Nomlala shared a panel discussion on the economy with Nelson Mandela University’s economics department professor Ronney Ncwadi and finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane.

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