The Citizen (KZN)

Water ‘cartel’ raises hackles

MONEY GOES INTO INDIVIDUAL­S’ POCKETS Angry residents barricade all roads leading into Bolobedu in Tzaneen.

- Alex Matlala alexm@citizen.co.za

Angry residents of Bolobedu in Tzaneen, Limpopo, yesterday barricaded all roads leading into the town and accused local ANC leadership of fronting companies in a multimilli­on-rand water project.

In his budget vote in May this year, Water and Sanitation Minister Gugile Nkwinti set aside R6.3 billion for infrastruc­ture projects and R2 billion for paying service providers delivering projects on behalf of the department.

Yesterday, incensed residents claimed a huge chunk of that money went straight into the pockets of mayors, directors and councillor­s through fronting.

“They only appoint service providers who speak the same political language as them, their distant relatives or their boyfriends or girlfriend­s,” said one disgruntle­d resident, who only introduced himself as Mathata from Ga-Moleketal village.

Mathata said those appointed to deliver the projects were expected to invoice the municipali­ty or the department and share the payout with their bosses.

He said the bosses were either the mayor who handed over the project, the director who was responsibl­e for the delivery of the project or the ward councillor who worked hand-in-glove with the service provider.

“They work like a cartel. Both the mayor and the director can ask the service provider to charge exorbitant­ly and share the remainder of the cut between them, with the service provider and the ward councillor,” he said.

Last month, the Mopani District Municipali­ty announced it had set aside over R400 million to thwart the protracted water woes faced since 2009. Out of the budget, Mopani District Municipali­ty’s mayor Nkakareng Rakgoale handed over projects worth more than R100 million to address the water situation in the Relela cluster and Bolobedu North in the Greater Letaba local municipali­ty.

The project is supposed to draw raw water from the Thapane Dam to purificati­on plants due to be constructe­d in Leokwe village. From there it will be redirected to more than 20 villages in the area.

Councillor Letty Thlangwane refuted the allegation­s, saying they were fabricatio­ns by those with vendettas against the leadership. –

They share the remainder of the cut

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