The Herald (South Africa)

ANC fires official arrested for cash heist

- Nico Gous

The ANC fired Errol Velile Present from the party on Wednesday after he was arrested and appeared in court for his alleged involvemen­t in a cashin-transit heist in Soweto.

“The ANC expects from its members and employees to respect the laws of the land and not be involved in any criminal activity‚” ANC spokespers­on Pule Mabe said.

The party said the allegation­s against Present were of a “serious nature that the organisati­on had to exercise rules provided for in the ANC personnel manual‚ terminatin­g his service with immediate effect”.

The party will start disciplina­ry proceeding­s against Present in his capacity as an ANC member.

“In accordance with Rule 25 of the ANC constituti­on and that in accordance with Rule 25.56 and Rule 25.57 accorded him an opportunit­y to indicate reasons why the organisati­on should not immediatel­y exercise its rights to temporaril­y suspend his membership of the ANC pending the outcomes of the disciplina­ry proceeding­s‚” Mabe said.

Present was one of four men arrested after a heist in Dobsonvill­e‚ Soweto‚ during a raid by the Johannesbu­rg metro police and SA police.

A crackdown on cash-intransit robberies‚ driven by police minister Bheki Cele‚ has resulted in numerous arrests.

Present is no stranger to controvers­y. In February 2017‚ the Sunday Times linked him to a controvers­ial farm deal in Limpopo.

The paper reported that then minister of land reform Gugile Nkwinti introduced the Luthuli House comrade‚ who was “shopping” for a thriving Limpopo farm‚ to one of his top officials at a land summit.

Just eight months after the meeting‚ Bekendvlei Farm was bought for R97m and handed over to Present‚ who had been working at Luthuli House for more than 10 years‚ and his partner‚ businessma­n Moses Boshomane‚ to manage.

A senior department­al official had prioritise­d the deal by bypassing required procedures.

A day after the deal went through‚ Nkwinti was the speaker at Present’s lavish wedding.

Neither Present nor Boshomane had an ancestral claim to the farm, and had no agricultur­al experience‚ the Sunday Times reported, and the once-thriving farm quickly fell into disrepair.

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