The Citizen (KZN)

Cape Town regresses

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

The City of Cape Town has fallen off the clean audit wagon, according to auditor-general (AG) Kimi Makwetu’s annual report on municipali­ties for the 2016-17 financial year.

This is the first time in at least a decade the metro did not make the list of municipali­ties that received clean audits, despite the Western Cape having the largest concentrat­ion of municipali­ties with clean audits at 70%.

Cape Town was one of six municipali­ties which regressed in the year under review, the report said. The changes after the local government elections caused instabilit­y at council level and in key senior positions, but the regression­s could mostly be attributed to failure to heed the recommenda­tions of the AG, according to the report.

Shadow minister for cooporativ­e governance and traditiona­l affairs Kevin Mileham said that political leadership was to blame for the city’s regression, but added that none of the country’s metros had received clean audits this time.

“We need to look at what the AG is saying about the City of Cape Town and the cause of that, among other things, is the issue around reporting to council and we need to look at what management could have or should have done better,” he added.

The city has been marred in controvers­y surroundin­g embattled mayor Patricia de Lille, who only managed to cling to her position through the courts.

The DA fired her from the party last week after months of attempts to oust her, including two motions of no confidence and opening a criminal case and two disciplina­ry cases against her.

Earlier this year, a fake report purportedl­y by the auditor-general was circulated by DA members suggesting the metro had received a qualified audit and cited financial mismanagem­ent in the city, laying the blame on De Lille.

We need to look at what the AG is saying about the City of Cape Town. Kevin Mileham DA shadow minister

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