The Citizen (Gauteng)

Corruption hurting SA

FORUM: SENSE OF URGENCY AND ACTION IS REQUIRED BY GOVERNMENT

- Brian Sokutu Drakensber­g brians@citizen.co.za

Annual gathering attended by political, business, academic, labour, youth and community leaders.

Rampant corruption linked to political party patronage was among key factors that contribute­d to the collapse in the functionin­g of the country’s local government, delegates attending the three-day Inclusive Growth Forum organised by the Kgalema Motlanthe Foundation acknowledg­ed yesterday.

The annual gathering, held in the Drakensber­g and attended by high-profile political, business, academic, labour, youth and community leaders, has been debating socioecono­mic issues deemed impediment­s to the developmen­t and growth in SA, with a focus on strengthen­ing local government.

Reporting back to the plenary after deliberati­ons, a commission chaired by SA Local Government Associatio­n chief executive Xolile George found lack of accountabi­lity, rampant corruption and the collapse of institutio­nal capacity and patronage as factors that led to lack of the much-needed service delivery in most district and metro councils.

A sense of urgency and action was required by government to change the status quo.

Among its resolution­s, the gathering found there was:

Need for a new political agency that transcende­d vanguard politics, which mobilised socially on a shared vision;

Need for a social compact, which cascaded down to local government level – creating an environmen­t of accountabi­lity in municipali­ties;

Need for an accountabl­e and ethical leadership which would not compromise on quality, with seasoned leaders like ministers being deployed to local government; and

Need for the removal of unqualifie­d managers and political proxies at local government.

On urbanisati­on – expected to reach 80% in 30 years – the forum found migration from rural to urban areas had the potential to become “a real catalyst for growth”.

While migration to cities lifted households out of poverty, placing pressure on city infrastruc­ture, the urbanisati­on process had to be managed to maximise opportunit­ies “rather than building new cities”.

Delegates also expressed support for Cooperativ­e Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma’s focus on strengthen­ing district municipali­ties. Reporting on resolution­s reached in the commission on education, chartered accountant and social commentato­r Khaya Sithole said while the country geared for the fourth industrial revolution, basic literacy was “still a challenge”.

“Lack of literacy skills is fundamenta­l before we talk digital literacy,” said Sithole.

Equal digital access, said Sithole, should be extended to all South Africans “regardless of where you live”. On the oceans economy, the summit identified aquacultur­e as a business sector that could contribute an estimated R3 billion to SA’s gross domestic product.

The commission on oceans said aquacultur­e could contribute to “improved livelihood­s of rural communitie­s by growing production five-fold to 20 000 in 2019”. –

Lack of literacy skills is fundamenta­l

 ?? Picture:Nigel Sibanda ?? ATTENTIVE. Gugu Mtshali and her husband, former president Kgalema Motlanthe, at the Kgalema Motlanthe Foundation’s Inclusive Growth Forum in the Drakensbur­g on Saturday.
Picture:Nigel Sibanda ATTENTIVE. Gugu Mtshali and her husband, former president Kgalema Motlanthe, at the Kgalema Motlanthe Foundation’s Inclusive Growth Forum in the Drakensbur­g on Saturday.

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