Sunday Times

‘Forum tries to hijack building jobs in province’

- JEFF WICKS

CRAIG Mallon’s last words to his wife, in the form of an SMS, are haunting — and point to a growing threat posed by a rogue KwaZuluNat­al business forum.

“Please look after our kids. You will be safer now that I am gone. DBF [the Delangokub­ona Business Forum] threatened us. Love you,” Mallon texted.

Hours later, on November 23, his wife found him dead, allegedly after he killed himself, although the police are still investigat­ing.

The constructi­on worker’s death is linked to a mafia-style constructi­on war in which the notorious forum has taken on the largest constructi­on firms in South Africa — a situation that many believe has put civil works projects worth billions of rands, from pipelines to hospitals and from malls to roads in KwaZulu-Natal, at risk.

Mallon’s work at a KwaDukuza hospital, in Stanger, was hamstrung by Delangokub­ona in the months before his death.

And this week a R1.8-billion revamp of Tsogo Sun’s Suncoast Casino complex was halted by the forum, which is accused of using threats of violence, intimidati­on and extortion to get lucrative constructi­on work.

So severe is the threat that when he gives his state of the province address on Tuesday, KwaZulu-Natal premier Willies Mchunu is expected to outline plans to tackle organisati­ons such as the DBF.

Last year the eThekwini municipali­ty took the forum to court. Former municipal boss Sibusiso Sithole called forum members “thugs” for holding up contractor­s at the electricit­y and refuse department­s and preventing them from working.

Also last year, constructi­on firm Elias Mechanicos Building Civil Engineerin­g went to court after its R120-million Durban city fleet building site was nearly torched — allegedly by the forum’s members — early one morning in June.

Two weeks ago the KwaDukuza dishad SUICIDE? Constructi­on worker Craig Mallon trict municipali­ty was granted a temporary order preventing the forum from “threatenin­g, intimidati­ng, assaulting or interferin­g” with municipal Mamela Nyamza and Aphiwe Livi perform in ‘De-Apart-Hate’, staged at the Wits Amphitheat­re during Dance Umbrella in Johannesbu­rg employees, contractor­s or subcontrac­tors at 34 constructi­on sites.

Days later, Deck, Steel & Concrete CC won a permanent court order preventing the forum from obstructin­g work and intimidati­ng staff at a site on the University of KwaZuluNat­al’s Edgewood campus.

The forum’s agenda and constituti­on remains vague, however theyhave reportedly demanded that they be given a share of the province's constructi­on industry in the form of contracts and sub-contracts.

Previously, the organisati­on fell under a Durban-based umbrella body called the Federation for Radical Economic Transforma­tion, but the federation said this week that DBF had been expelled a week earlier over disagreeme­nts with their modus operandi.

Mallon’s wife has asked not to be identified and declined to comment, saying the matter remained “sensitive” and that there was “so much more at play”.

A Delangokub­ona director, Truman Mnyandu, refused to respond to queries.

Bradley Boertje, of the Liviero constructi­on company, confirmed that work on Stanger Private Hospital been obstructed, but said delays had not been substantia­l.

“We did not witness Mallon being threatened by the Delangokub­ona Business Forum and therefore have no evidence in this regard,” he said.

Peter Barnard, of Cox Yeats Attorneys, who represents 10 constructi­on companies and businesses, has squared off with the forum in court.

“The issue at hand is that we have to react and go to court when these problems arise.

“If we get an order in line with the applicatio­n then the police might well be able to act the moment a problem arises,” he said.

“At some point at the beginning of last year, I understand that the forum marched on city hall and demanded a stake in constructi­on work from the city. When nothing came of that they started threatenin­g contractor­s directly.”

He said some contractor­s, unwilling to suffer losses from site closures and penalty clauses, had kowtowed.

“We now have a situation where we have about 30 different forums, all with different aims and agendas, vying for work, training or payment.

“This attitude of entitlemen­t has resulted in violence and threats. You have millions of people who want work and only a finite number of jobs available,” Barnard said.

Please look after our kids. You will be safer now that I am gone

 ?? Picture: JOHN HOGG ??
Picture: JOHN HOGG
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