The Citizen (KZN)

Sascoc inquiry set to drag on

- Wesley Bo on

While the report on an inquiry into the SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) is expected to be released by the end of the month, the process remains ongoing and government will need to discuss the findings with stakeholde­rs before they are released to the public.

The inquiry into governance issues at Sascoc, which was conducted by an independen­t panel headed by retired Judge Ralph Zulman, was completed in March but the results of the investigat­ion had not yet been released by Sports Minister Tokozile Xasa.

Former sports minister Thulas Nxesi, who launched the probe, had previously threatened to dissolve the Sascoc board based on the findings, and this potential move could place the country in danger of being suspended by global governing body the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee due to government interferen­ce.

“The minister is expected to release something at the end of the month,” Mickey Modisane, director of communicat­ions at the department of sport and recreation, said yesterday.

“Once she has gone through the report she’ll have to meet with stakeholde­rs first, and that will pave the way forward.”

Various sports administra­tors, officials and federation representa­tives gave submission­s to the inquiry panel.

The panel, which also included labour lawyer Shamima Gaibie and former sports administra­tor Ali Bacher, heard allegation­s of exorbitant spending by Sascoc executives, as well as allegation­s of maladminis­tration and mismanagem­ent by senior Sascoc staff, with multiple individual­s painting the organisati­on as a failing umbrella body.

While a previous investigat­ion launched by former public protector Thuli Madonsela in 2012 was never completed, apparently due to resource constraint­s, it was hoped the Zulman inquiry would be able to address long-running allegation­s into Sascoc affairs.

“We want to get all sides of the story – the plaintiff, the defendant and the truth,” Zulman said during the inquiry.

“We’re mainly concerned with the truth.”

Minister Xasa is expected to release something at the end of the month. Once she has gone through the report, she’ll have to meet with stakeholde­rs first, and that will pave the way forward. Mickey Modisane Department of sport director of communicat­ions

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