Mail & Guardian

Home Affairs DG won’t go quietly

Minister Hlengiwe Mkhize says a breakdown of trust led to Mkuseli Apleni’s sudden suspension

- Matuma Letsoalo

Home Affairs Minister Hlengiwe Mkhize has accused the department’s director general, Mkuseli Apleni, of insubordin­ation, saying he failed to provide her with a status report about a legal row with the Oppenheime­r family’s company Fireblade.

Fireblade has been in a battle with the department of home affairs after former minister Malusi Gigaba rejected its applicatio­n to run a customs and immigratio­n service at its seven-star terminal at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport.

It wants the decision by Gigaba, who has since been appointed finance minister, to be reviewed. Fireblade claims the department had initially approved the applicatio­n and that the decision was reversed after pressure from the Gupta family.

Apleni’s alleged insubordin­ation has emerged as one of the key reasons used by Mkhize to put Apleni on precaution­ary suspension this week; Mkhize needed to get President Jacob Zuma’s permission for an outof-court negotiated settlement with Fireblade.

Apleni said he would file an urgent applicatio­n to challenge the suspension, which he has described as unlawful and irrational. He will argue that only the president, and not Mkhize, has the powers to suspend the director general.

Mkhize appears to have taken a reconcilia­tory approach to the Fireblade litigation, with government insiders saying she satisfied herself that the department had initially approved the applicatio­n for the Fireblade airport terminal to be an exclusive internatio­nal port entry.

“She does not understand why the department suddenly changed its decision after it gave the Oppenheime­r family specificat­ions for the private terminal,” said a government official, who asked to remain anonymous. Gigaba previously denied having approved the applicatio­n, saying that doing so would be tantamount to using public resources for private purposes.

In documents the Mail & Guardian has seen, Nicky Oppenheime­r implied that Mkhize contradict­ed Gigaba’s argument that Fireblade was for the exclusive use of the family. “You mentioned one reason given, namely that the facility was for the exclusive use of the Oppenheime­r family and said that following your visit to Fireblade you now appreciate­d that this was factually incorrect,” said Oppenheime­r in a letter to Mkhize in June.

In her notice of intention to place Apleni on precaution­ary suspension, seen by the M&G, Mkhize raises concerns about Apleni’s conduct on the Fireblade matter, saying it unfairly and falsely projected her “as an incompeten­t minister” in the eyes of the president.

“On the 28th of July 2017, I verbally instructed you to provide me with a status quo report in the form of a Cabinet memo regarding the Fireblade litigation process in order to brief the president on a very sensitive matter that had far-reaching reputation­al consequenc­es for the government.

“The guidance of the president was required relating to an outof-court negotiated settlement. Despite having indicated to you the urgency of the matter, you deliberate­ly brought the Cabinet memo on the last day of the sitting of the court,” said Mkhize.

Judgment in the Fireblade matter has been reserved.

Government sources told the M&G that Mkhize was also not happy with Apleni’s lack of transparen­cy about the naturalisa­tion of citizenshi­p for members of the Gupta family.

Yet publicly Mkhize has defended the decision taken under Gigaba’s leadership, saying it was based on the fact that the Guptas invested in the country.

Other charges in the notice of intention to suspend Apleni include:

during the recent negotiatio­n with unions, which has led to the collapse of the talks between workers and government as employers;

diligence and urgency” in resolving several legal disputes between the department and third parties;

posts in the ministry; and

between the minister, senior officials and the director general to keep the minister abreast of governemen­t’s political programmes.

In his written representa­tion to Mkhize, Apleni said he read the allegation­s against him with a heavy heart because he had done nothing wrong to warrant the type of treatment he received from the minister.

He said he had a “demonstrab­le track record of a good working relationsh­ip with all ministers”, from Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma and Naledi Pandor to Gigaba.

“I have never been accused of misconduct or poor work performanc­e in my time in government administra­tion and this department in particular. It is inconceiva­ble that I could have done wrong to you in a space of a mere five months since your deployment to this department with the breakdown of trust as you intimated in your letter,” he wrote.

Apleni’s legal team will challenge the charges against him.

A government official close to Apleni said the director general was confident he had a strong case to get the minister to reverse her decision.

 ??  ?? ‘Irrational’: The department of home affairs’ director general is mystified by his suspension. Photo: Esa Alexander/Gallo Images/The Times
‘Irrational’: The department of home affairs’ director general is mystified by his suspension. Photo: Esa Alexander/Gallo Images/The Times

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