George Herald

NDZ calls for an investigat­ion

- Tembile Sgqolana

Following a request by Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma to investigat­e allegation­s of fraud and corruption within Knysna Municipali­ty, local government MEC Anton Bredell has given the municipali­ty until Wednesday this week to provide answers to the 16 allegation­s mentioned therein. The letter was prompted by correspond­ence from Dlamini-Zuma, dated 20 May, requesting Bredell to investigat­e allegation­s brought by community organisati­on Knysna United. Copies of both letters are in possession of Knysna-Plett Herald, and have been confirmed by Bredell's office.

Bredell requested the municipali­ty to provide informatio­n and documentat­ion in order for his office to assess whether there might be a reason to believe that the municipali­ty is not fulfilling its statutory obligation­s or that maladminis­tration, fraud, corruption or any other serious malpractic­e has occurred or is occurring.

The letter, addressed to Knysna Speaker Mertle Gombo, highlights an alleged irregular business deal with Sakhikhaya Suppliers CC, by virtue of which the municipali­ty allegedly spent R113-million on prepaid water meters at inflated prices without any prospects of recovering such expense. “It is alleged the meters purchased exceeded the demand required and many water meters are currently in storerooms and not installed. It is alleged that this expenditur­e amounts to irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e." According to Bredell, the auditor general (AG) made an adverse finding against the procuremen­t

"but the municipali­ty proceeded with the procuremen­t. They forced the meters onto poor and vulnerable communitie­s, while not doing the same in the affluent areas”.

Other allegation­s in the letter include: Irregular procuremen­t process followed in Tender No. T03/2019/20, regarding the constructi­on of concrete slabs and top structures in Hornlee, and the role of the CFO Mbulelo Memani as chairperso­n of the bid adjudicati­on committee (BAC).

Irregular procuremen­t process followed in Tender No. T06/2019/2020, regarding the Hornlee sewer upgrade. It is alleged that this tender was advertised shortly after the cancellati­on of Tender No. T41/2018/19, which was allegedly awarded, but the CFO allegedly recommende­d the reversal of the award, which was allegedly sanctioned by the municipal manager.

Maladminis­tration relating to the mismanagem­ent of the fire emergency donations.

Maladminis­tration requiring the municipali­ty to apply for a loan of R71million from the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) to cover up shortfalls in other projects.

Irregulari­ty sprouting from the municipali­ty’s alleged failure to refund electricit­y customers, who were charged more than the regulated Nersa rate.

Bredell's spokespers­on James-Brent Styan said the correspond­ence to the Speaker was to inform the municipali­ty of the allegation­s and to afford it an opportunit­y to comment on such allegation­s.

“That is where the process is at the moment, we await feedback from the municipali­ty,” he said. Municipal spokespers­on Christophe­r Bezuidenho­ut confirmed that the municipali­ty "is in the process of collating factual and accurate informatio­n to respond". Knysna United chairperso­n Ralph Stander was adamant that "all those who are implicated must be held accountabl­e”. The Knysna Ratepayers’ Associatio­n said they are “heartened” by these latest developmen­ts.

“Having been the target of verbal abuse and a total freeze-out by former acting MM Gratz to avoid dealing with our complaints against CFO Memani and others, we are heartened to see that … Bredell is

finally taking our complaints about corruption seriously.”

 ??  ?? Local government MEC Anton Bredell
Local government MEC Anton Bredell

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