The Citizen (Gauteng)

Water ‘cartel’ raises hackles

ACCUSATION: MONEY GOES INTO INDIVIDUAL­S’ POCKETS

- Alex Matlala alexm@citizen.co.za

Angry residents barricade all roads leading into Bolobedu in Tzaneen.

Angry residents of Bolobedu in Tzaneen, Limpopo, yesterday barricaded all roads leading into the town and accused local ANC leadership of fronting companies in a multimilli­on-rand water project.

In his budget vote in May this year, Water and Sanitation Minister Gugile Nkwinti set aside R6.3 billion for infrastruc­ture projects and R2 billion for paying service providers delivering projects on behalf of the department.

Yesterday, incensed residents claimed a huge chunk of that money went straight into the pockets of mayors, directors and councillor­s through fronting.

“They only appoint service providers who speak the same political language as them, their distant relatives or their boyfriends or girlfriend­s,” said one disgruntle­d resident, who only introduced himself as Mathata from Ga-Moleketal village.

Mathata said those appointed to deliver the projects were expected to invoice the municipali­ty or the department and share the payout with their bosses.

He said the bosses were either the mayor who handed over the project, the director who was responsibl­e for the delivery of the project or the ward councillor who worked hand-in-glove with the service provider.

“They work like a cartel. Both the mayor and the director can ask the service provider to charge exorbitant­ly and share the remainder of the cut between them, with the service provider and the ward councillor,” he said.

Last month, the Mopani District Municipali­ty announced it had set aside over R400 million to thwart the protracted water woes faced since 2009. Out of the budget, Mopani District Municipali­ty’s mayor Nkakareng Rakgoale handed over projects worth more than R100 million to address the water situation in the Relela cluster and Bolobedu North in the Greater Letaba local municipali­ty.

The project is supposed to draw raw water from the Thapane Dam to purificati­on plants due to be constructe­d in Leokwe village. From there it will be redirected to more than 20 villages in the area.

Councillor Letty Thlangwane refuted the allegation­s, saying they were fabricatio­ns by those with vendettas against the leadership. –

They share the remainder of the cut

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