The Citizen (Gauteng)

DA wants more heads to roll over land deal

NEW YORK: BAD REFLECTION ON IMAGE OF SA Director-general of internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n department suspended.

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More heads should roll in relation to a botched R118 million New York land deal, the Democratic Alliance (DA) has said. This follows the precaution­ary suspension on Thursday last week of the director-general of the department of internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n, Kgabo Mahoai, more than a year after a parliament­ary fact-finding mission found that land it bought for new offices did not exist.

DA MP Mergan Chetty, who was part of the parliament­ary delegation to New York, said Mahoai was “for the want of a better word, a smokescree­n”, adding “it was clear that this department flouted regulation­s of Treasury” and the officials’ conduct was shocking.

Despite rumours that the department’s chief financial officer, Caiphus Ramashau, was also due to be suspended, department spokesman Lunga Ngqulunga said Mahoai was the only person suspended.

According to the oversight report compiled by parliament’s portfolio committee on internatio­nal relations and cooperatio­n, the project was driven from Pretoria.

According to the report: “It was said that [Ramashau] and the chief director, property management [Bernice Africa] would jet [to New York] to hold meetings with real estate agents ... and leave without informing the two missions on their discussion­s on the matter.”

The MPs noted: “There was no vacant land on inspection of the New York pilot project. What exists is an unsuitable old and dilapidate­d building and R118 million has already been paid for buying the purported site/vacant land parcel.

“The amount of R118 million was noted to have been paid on the basis of a misreprese­ntation to the department that the real estate agent has bought land to build a suitable and sustainabl­e office building.

“The supply chain management challenges associated with the New York pilot project are a source of diplomatic embarrassm­ent and posed both representa­tional and reputation­al risk to the image of the country.”

The report also questioned why the then-ambassador to the UN, Jerry Matjila, had failed to meet the committee during its oversight visit, sending his deputy, Xolisa Mabhongo, instead. Matjila was said to have been on leave at the time.

He, the report noted, “was the accounting officer when the procuremen­t for the New York pilot project was approved in 2016-17”, and was appointed to the mission in New York shortly afterwards.

Mahoai took over from him as director-general.

The report noted: “There were still questions left unanswered due to the absence of the permanent representa­tive. In order to get responses, the committee delegation resolved he would have to present himself before the committee...

“The minister would be asked to determine how his trip would be financed as he absented himself without an official apology, though he was aware the committee was travelling to New York to meet with him.”

Chetty accused Minister of Internatio­nal Relations and Cooperatio­n Naledi Pandor of dragging her feet on this issue.

South Africa’s two-year tenure as a nonpermane­nt member of the UN Security Council came to an end last year and Matjila was replaced by ambassador Mathu Joyini, who presented her credential­s to UN Secretary-General Antonio Gueterres on 3 February.

Matjila is believed to have been appointed to the UN on a four-year contract as he technicall­y retired in 2016, and it was not clear what he was doing now.

He did not respond to a phone call or a WhatsApp message.

Ngqulunga said the department was looking into the matter.

KwaZulu-Natal emergency responders are searching for two people who were swept away by the uThukela River.

KwaZulu-Natal cooperativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs MEC Sipho Hlomuka said the eight year old and an elderly man, believed to be the father, were swept away near Kranskop on Friday.

“Disaster management teams have been deployed to the area to locate the victims. Raging currents are making it difficult to commence.” –

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