The Citizen (Gauteng)

Dlamini: don’t question R6bn

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Social Developmen­t Minister Bathabile Dlamini, in a brief appearance before parliament’s watchdog public accounts committee (Scopa) yesterday, refused to explain why her department needed R6 billion to prepare the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) to take over the payment of welfare grants.

“I really find it is unfair because we are being asked a question and we make an estimation out of the work we have done and we say clearly this is going to stretch over a period of five years,” she said.

“It was very clear and we are still going to go back to the portfolio committee and the select committee and specify or give a proper budget on the whole programme and, therefore, Scopa will come when the right time comes.”

Dlamini was responding to a question from Democratic Alliance MP Tim Breuteseth over a financial projection she made last week, which sparked a renewed outcry over Sassa’s apparent lack of readiness to take over grant payment once the current arrangemen­t with private contractor Cash Paymaster Services (CPS) expires.

The minister arrived two-anda-half hours into a crunch meeting with Scopa, which is trying to oversee Sassa’s preparatio­ns to take over payments. The agency’s failure to be ready to do so in April sparked a crisis that was only resolved when the Constituti­onal Court ruled that CPS had a constituti­onal duty to continue paying about 17 million welfare grants monthly, though its contract was due to expire at the end of March.

Most of the briefing yesterday saw embattled Sassa CEO Thokozani Magwazi trying to account for both the agency’s preparatio­ns for a new payment regime to replace CPS, as well as irregular expenditur­e of millions of rands.

Magwaza was also uncomforta­ble mapping out plans for the immediate future. He said it would only become clear today, at a workshop, whether the South African Post Office would be a “solution integrator” that would resume responsibi­lity for a new interim structure “lock, stock and barrel”, or whether certain aspects of a new system would be put to tender.

Only then could Sassa approach National Treasury for funds for a systems transfer, he said.

“Things are happening … We want to finalise everything and then put it in writing.”

The relationsh­ip between Dlamini and Magwaza all but broke down in March as the payment crisis came to a head. – ANA

I really find it is unfair because we are being asked a question and we make an estimation out of the work we have done.

Bathabile Dlamini Social Developmen­t Minister

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