The Citizen (Gauteng)

Millions down the borehole

SUSPENDED BY COUNCIL: ALLEGED FRAUD AND THEFT

- Alex Matlala – alexm@citizen.co.za

Two district municipali­ty officials in Limpopo have been suspended for allegedly siphoning off R100 million by fabricatin­g drilling of boreholes.

Accused of siphoning off monies by fabricatin­g drilling and issuing invoices to kin, friends and political cronies.

ALimpopo district municipali­ty has suspended two senior officials amid allegation­s of irregular awarding of borehole tenders and fraud and theft to the tune of R100 million.

This comes after the portfolio committee on water and sanitation led by chairperso­n Lulu Johnson discovered that some service providers had charged the Mopani district municipali­ty R2 million per borehole earlier this year.

The committee, which visited water-related projects in the district, also found that three-quarters of the 4 820 boreholes drilled in Tzaneen, Giyani, Phalaborwa, Hoedspruit and Modjadjisk­loof have not produced a drop of water.

The municipali­ty announced yesterday it had suspended two satellite managers, Solomon Rasethe of Letaba and Emanuel Ratshitang­a of Tzaneen.

“They will face internal disciplina­ry hearings in no time. We have appointed two other satellite managers so service delivery does not suffer,” said municipali­ty spokespers­on Witness Tiva.

Tiva could not divulge the nature of the charges as the matter was sub judice. However, sources privy to the details of the suspension­s said they were accused of siphoning off cash by fabricatin­g drilling of boreholes and issuing invoices to their families, friends and political cronies for a total of more than R100 million.

A three-week investigat­ion by The Citizen revealed that in June 2010, R25 million from the municipali­ty’s operationa­l budget was paid among 25 companies for the maintenanc­e and repair of dysfunctio­nal boreholes in specified villages. But the awarding of the tenders was queried by some service providers, which said that only those with political links to the ANC Mopani regional leaders were awarded tenders.

Then R16 million was spent on repairing 4 000 non-functionin­g boreholes. A month later, then minister for environmen­tal affairs Buyelwa Sonjica pledged to spend R75 million in addition to the available R250 million to address the water saga.

This week, DA caucus leader in the Mopani district municipali­ty, Marie Helm, confirmed the district had serious water problems. She said residents of Turkey and Butswana villages in Maruleng haven’t had water since 2013.

“During the visit to the municipali­ty last week, we were baffled to find that of the 16 boreholes drilled in the past five years, 15 were dry and only one had water in drips and drabs,” she said.

Helm added that the only water pump, which had supplied several villages with water, had been stolen.

EFF leader in Lephepane Sanco Madia accused the ANC of treating Mopani residents “like a kind of incurable disease when it comes to basic human needs”.

But Limpopo is not the only province facing a water crisis. Gauteng could also be hit hard if plans by Water and Sanitation Minister Gugile Nkwinti to secure more funding for the Lesotho Highlands Water Project are unsuccessf­ul.

The project’s second phase, which did not start on time due to financial constraint­s, will draw drinkable water from Lesotho to augment the province’s supply. It should have begun in 2015, but was delayed due to financial woes when the department was under Nomvula Mokonyane.

DA shadow minister for water and sanitation Leon Basson said it would take a miracle for the department to successful­ly provide water to Gauteng by 2025 because Mokonyane had practicall­y bankrupted the department.

He said the department owed water boards across the country more than R1.5 billion and more than R5 billion to suppliers, contractor­s and the SA Reserve Bank.

During a visit to Limpopo last month, Nkwinti admitted that water supply was a serious problem and undertook to provide funds for the Giyani emergency water interventi­on to complete its R2.7 billion bulk water project. When completed, it would supply the town and 55 villages.

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