The Herald (South Africa)

Grahamstow­n name change ‘was not legal’

- Adrienne Carlisle

Changing Grahamstow­n’s name to Makhanda has been a comedy of errors, says a civil society organisati­on, warning that arts and culture minister Nathi Mthethwa may have to pay the cost of the resulting litigation out of his own pocket.

If Keep Grahamstow­n Grahamstow­n (KGG) has its way, the minister and his officials will have to foot the bill arising from the serial blunders it says have been committed during the process, which has been drawn out over a decade.

The long list of defects, say KGG’s joint co-ordinators, Jock McConnachi­e and Sigidla Ndumo, started with the public consultati­on process which did not follow legal requiremen­ts.

The government notice issued in June regarding the proposed name change had also been problemati­c.

It had failed, as required by law, to inform people of their right to object to the proposed name change, McConnachi­e and Ndumo said.

“It gave the impression that the effect of publicatio­n of the notice was that the name of Grahamstow­n was already changed to Makhanda.”

By law, the city would remain Grahamstow­n until all objections had been lodged and considered.

They said the minister had not responded to a single one of thousands of objections.

The KGG had itself submitted a comprehens­ive list of objections on behalf of more than 10,000 people.

“The minister must consider every objection and provide reasons for accepting or rejecting them and has so far only acknowledg­ed receipt of 332, which means thousands of objections are not accounted for.”

They say Mthethwa compounded all these irregulari­ties with his recent statement that he intended formally announcing on Heritage Day that the name of Grahamstow­n had been changed to Makhanda ka Nxele rather than just Makhanda.

“Makhanda ka Nxele is not the name as gazetted in the notice and has therefore never been formally proposed as required by law.”

The KGG has given notice that due to the many irregulari­ties relating to the process, including the defective notice, it intends launching a court challenge.

Mthethwa has indicated that he considered the process to have been entirely in line with legislatio­n. –

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