Mail & Guardian

Diverted funds puts soldiers at risk

United Nations money for SA peacekeepe­rs is channelled to treasury instead of defence

- John Stupart

South Africa’s peacekeepe­rs are being shortchang­ed — and potentiall­y put at risk — by an arrangemen­t that channels vital peacekeepi­ng funds away from the military to the treasury.

South Africa deploys peacekeepe­rs in several African countries, but they operate on a shoestring budget. Things are so bad that the army usually relies on vehicles and equipment left to them in their country of operation, and the air force must regularly must charter aircraft to ferry men and heavy equipment.

Nowhere was the severe funding shortfall more apparent than during the 2013 Battle of Bangui in the Central African Republic, where 15 soldiers died fending off a rebel offensive. The troops lacked heavy weapons and the capacity for reinforcem­ents, and evacuating the wounded was left to chartered aircraft.

With what little equipment and support they had, it was a testament to the military’s can-do attitude that more troops did not come back in body bags.

The funding problem has many roots. One of the largest issues lies in the losses incurred by the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) every time it deploys peacekeepi­ng missions abroad.

Although the United Nations compensate­s every troop-contributi­ng country, in South Africa’s case the money returned rarely finds its way back to the defence force — leaving the SANDF’s overstretc­hed budget bearing all additional costs associated with its peacekeepi­ng effort.

This has real consequenc­es. Last year the South African mission to Darfur, an 800-odd force providing security to civilians in Sudan, was ended. Cost was one major problem. The military could not afford the upkeep of its soldiers, no matter how noble the mission — despite the fact that the UN was reimbursin­g South Africa for its efforts.

It is also evident in South Africa’s major peacekeepi­ng deployment in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where the constant presence of a South African battalion has earned widespread praise for their performanc­e as part of the pioneering Force Interventi­on Brigade — yet they remain chronicall­y underfunde­d and underequip­ped.

If the military is not getting the UN’s reimbursem­ents, where is the money going?

In a nutshell, to everyone else in the government. The UN compensati­on is funnelled back to the treasury’s national revenue fund. Compensati­on for danger pay, food, uniforms, accommodat­ion, petrol, repairs and all the other logistics of putting South African boots on the ground abroad goes straight to the treasury. If the refunds from the UN were directed from treasury to defence, a major money sink in the military could be plugged.

Defence Minister Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula acknowledg­ed the discord between treasury and the department in her post-budget speech media briefing in late May. “Over the years, the money reimbursed by the UN would go to the national fiscus. So every other government department would have access to that money.”

Mapisa-Nqakula made another telling point. “Sometimes it’s a challenge of the national fiscus, but also at times people take decisions because they don’t want to understand,” she said.

This can be interprete­d as a veiled criticism of treasury, and its failure to cater adequately for the defence force — a stance that harks back to the dark days of the arms deal scandal, but risks endangerin­g South African soldiers’ lives today.

The tensions between the defence department and treasury leave the military’s leaders in a strategic Catch-22.

On the one hand, commanders are coerced into agreeing to ill-conceived deployment­s abroad to justify their budgetary relevance each financial year. On the other hand, they receive no immediate funding from treasury when the UN pays South Africa back. The money is instead poured into the national kitty, leaving the defence force worse off than before.

This is not to say the defence department is entirely blameless. The department is stubbornly pushing through the defence review, a legislativ­e behemoth aimed at modernisin­g and revamping the defence force. Although it may be a clear and well-argued policy document, the review comes with a hefty price tag in the form of increases to the defence budget.

In the current South African economic climate such increases, from roughly 1.2% of South Africa’s gross domestic product to 2%, are hopelessly out of touch with reality. As such the defence force is stuck with an expansive and expensive future strategy, including peacekeepi­ng missions abroad at great cost, but is unlikely to have the budget to execute it properly.

When questioned on what the plan B was if the defence review was not funded, Mapisa-Nqakula has stressed the need to convince treasury to fund plan A, or the review as it stands.

Downsizing the military is not an option, evidently. On the contrary, a proposal to delink soldiers’ salaries from their ranks was suggested this month, costing a possible extra R1.4billion. Treasury, and South Africans, must evidently find the money out of thin air.

In the interim, South Africa’s soldiers based in the jungles surroundin­g northern and eastern DRC, and wherever else they may be deployed as peacekeepe­rs, remain hopelessly underfunde­d and underequip­ped for the conflicts they are trying to contain.

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 ??  ?? Let down: Like the South African troops killed in the Central African Republic in 2013 (above), the country’s peacekeepe­rs in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (left) are underequip­ped. Photos: Reuters & James Akena/Reuters
Let down: Like the South African troops killed in the Central African Republic in 2013 (above), the country’s peacekeepe­rs in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (left) are underequip­ped. Photos: Reuters & James Akena/Reuters

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