The Citizen (KZN)

Lots to ‘cluck’ about

MOFOKENG EMPHATICAL­LY DENIES SPLURGING He insists purchases were to feed people at official meetings.

- – stevent@citizen.co.za

Shakespear­e Inn.

When contacted by The Citizen this week, Mofokeng denied the allegation­s.

He said at the beginning of 2008, when he was at the helm of the district municipali­ty, he had a credit card which was used for mayoral work and stakeholde­r engagement purposes.

“Following the elections in 2011, the ANC deployed me again as mayor and a decision was taken that we no longer needed the credit card. As a result, what is called an out of pocket expenditur­e arrangemen­t had to be made, which meant I would then have to claim monies I spent back from the municipali­ty,” he said.

“The meals that the DA has been talking about ... I had to buy them using my own money, which I later claimed back from the municipali­ty and the R1.7 million figure was not properly articulate­d, because the monies I claimed back amounted to around R100 000,” he said.

With regards to the hotels the municipali­ty had worked with in the past, Mofokeng said they included the Riviera, Three Rivers Lodge, Shakespear­e Inn and Riverside Hotel.

He stressed that the local municipali­ty had always had a clean audit.

“For instance, if I’m having a meeting with, maybe, church leaders and it happens that it runs later than was initially expected, we can’t just let people go without eating something, hence we would order food from Nando’s or KFC. But I don’t eat KFC because of my cholestero­l issues … I prefer eating healthy and that’s why I prefer Nando’s over KFC,” he said.

This week, the DA’s Chabalala also issued a statement, alleging that the ANC in Emfuleni had spent just shy of R1 million of public money to protect itself from internal party factionali­sm.

This, according to Chabalala, was revealed in a reply to a DA question in the legislatur­e by Gauteng cooperativ­e governance MEC Paul Mashatile.

According to Mashatile, the money allocated for private protection services to councillor­s was for the mitigation and prevention of threats encountere­d during service delivery protests and intraparty political conflicts.

Responding to this, Mofokeng said there was stability in the region and that the DA was just trying to score cheap political points.

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