The Citizen (KZN)

Sort the grants mess out now

-

Isn’t it high time that everyone concerned puts the egos, the confusing mixed agendas, the stampede to the courts and the myriad conspiracy theories muddying the turgid waters of the grants fiasco to one side and concentrat­e on the core issue: if government grants are not forthcomin­g on April 1, as many as 17 million South Africans will take the first step towards starvation.

All the needy are left with at present is an affirmatio­n from President Jacob Zuma that the grants will indeed be paid on time, but even this promise from the most exalted source in the land has done little to lift the anxieties.

There can be no possible ethical or moral reason amid the claims and counter claims putting the blame anywhere but in their own personal space that the most needy of our citizens should bear the brunt of the cloud of obfuscatio­n which obscures the real issue.

Put quite simply, Social Developmen­t Minister Bathabile Dlamini has had more than sufficient time to have formulated some alternativ­e to using the agency of Cash Paymaster Services (CPS), the payout provider a Constituti­onal Court ruling found were unfit to perform the task as far back as 2014.

The service provider’s multi-million rand contracted tenure is about to run out in a little more than a fortnight’s time and, by default it seems, are likely to get an emergency reprieve to keep the grants rolling to save political face – and for that matter retain the grassroots votes which go hand in hand with government largesse.

It is imperative that the quibbling stops and that this potential human disaster is set to rights. If our leadership cannot achieve that inside a fast-approachin­g deadline, we can no longer even vaguely pretend that we are a caring nation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa