The Herald (South Africa)

Officials must be accountabl­e

- VUYO MVOKO

This week the world came to know that two Catholic nuns had, for years, been stealing millions from a school where they worked, only to splash out on travel and gambling, the story serving to confirm once again that things (and people) aren’t always what they seem to be at face value.

The Catholic Church worldwide, not just in Los Angeles, is still reeling from the shock of how sisters Mary Margaret Kreuper and Lana Chang did what they did, for so many years, and got away with it.

About 17,094km from Los Angeles, the SA Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) had brought together in Durban a few hundred of SA’s top councillor­s and officials from 196 municipali­ties, “to reflect” and “critically examine” their stance on, among several other burning issues, accountabi­lity and consequenc­e management.

In his tone-setting opening address to the gathering, President Cyril Ramaphosa did not mince his words: “If local government is to succeed, it needs effective leadership.

“It needs mayors and councillor­s that inspire confidence, that are respected in communitie­s and that have a clear vision.

“Local government needs leaders within the council and within the administra­tion who are not corrupt, who do not dispense patronage, and who will not tolerate the theft or wastage of public resources.

“Those who are corrupt must be removed from their positions and must face the full might of the law.”

Ramaphosa was still delivering his speech when, just more than 876km away in Polokwane, Limpopo premier and ANC provincial chairperso­n Stan Mathabatha announced that following an investigat­ion, the party’s provincial executive committee had taken a resolution to ask seven mayors implicated in the VBS Mutual Bank scandal to resign.

“It is also recommende­d that steps be taken against municipal managers and chief financial officers,” Mathabatha added.

The seven municipali­ties are on the brink of insolvency and could soon be placed under administra­tion, after losing hundreds of millions of rands in illegal investment­s in the now defunct VBS Mutual Bank.

The bank was placed under liquidatio­n following an order by the Pretoria high court last month.

How ironic that two of the mayors who were being fired and some of their officials were at the Salga meeting.

As they left Durban in a huff, Ramaphosa aptly concluded his speech: “We therefore look to you – the members of Salga – to give meaning and effect to the new dawn that the South African people need and deserve.”

It was then left to local government minister Dr Zweli Mkhize, deputy finance minister Mondli Gungubele, Salga president Parks Tau, parliament’s standing committee on public accounts chairperso­n Themba Godi and National House of Traditiona­l Leaders chairperso­n Sipho Mahlangu to lead a two-hour discussion on why accountabi­lity was such an intractabl­e problem in local government.

Tau was blunt: “We must own up to the objective reality that in many of our municipali­ties we have failed to serve our people with integrity; there is a state of maladminis­tration and a high number of reported incidences of corruption; lack of implementa­tion of service delivery and accountabi­lity and consequenc­e management.

“This is an image that we cannot be proud of; as this erodes the confidence of our people in the system of local government.”

Local government practition­ers could no longer afford to be indifferen­t, Mkhize added, when it was clear that some among them “are loyal to their own interests”.

It’s taken so long for the politician­s to even talk the talk.

One wonders whether the walking of the talk we are now beginning to see, will last. Let’s hope it does.

After all, it took a very long time for Catholics to even acknowledg­e the widespread abuse that was so endemic in the church.

And when it was eventually acknowledg­ed, it was ascribed to a few rotten potatoes.

One hopes that the two criminal sisters who have made the church famous again for another wrong reason not only belong to a minority, but an example will be set for such offenders in future.

We deserve better leaders – politicall­y, religiousl­y, in fact in every sphere of our lives – than the nuns, the politician­s and administra­tors who grabbed the headlines this past week.

We need leaders, not pretenders who continue to betray our trust and faith in them.

Let there be consequenc­es for those that refuse to be accountabl­e.

Those who are corrupt must be removed from their positions and must face the full might of the law President Cyril Ramaphosa

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ZWELI MKHIZE
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