Business Day

DA condemns ‘fat-cat’ travel bill of Sisulu’s former aide

- Linda Ensor Parliament­ary Writer ensorl@businessli­ve.co.za

A senior aide of former human settlement­s, water & sanitation minister Lindiwe Sisulu — who was moved in the recent cabinet reshuffle to minister of tourism — claimed more than R1.76m on travel and accommodat­ion since May 2019.

This was revealed in a written reply to a parliament­ary question by DA human settlement­s spokespers­on Emma Louise Powell.

Powell said in a statement that the claims by Mphumzi Mdekazi for travel and accommodat­ion were in addition to the “already hyperinfla­ted” monthly salary of R142,920 he received as an advisory committee member for 15 days’ work a month.

“Frequently accused of wielding inappropri­ate influence within both big-budget department­s, Mphumzi Mdekazi is widely rumoured to be the driving force behind Sisulu’s presidenti­al ambitions,” Powell said.

“It is further long alleged that Mdekazi personally handpicked members of Sisulu’s notorious ‘national rapid response task team’ on the basis of their ability to garner political support for Sisulu ahead of the ANC’s 2022 elective conference.”

Powell claimed that Sisulu had been able to bypass ministeria­l handbook staff limits to stack her political deck via the establishm­ent of various advisory committees and task teams over which she then had direct control by invoking the Water Services Act.

“Specialist­s serving alongside Mdekazi on this particular Water

Services Act advisory committee included the likes of a Kenyan documentar­y filmmaker, who served as the department’s cameraman, as well as a radio presenter and former Kaizer Chiefs public relations officer,” Powell said.

“That one single committee member was permitted to rack up a taxpayer-funded travel and accommodat­ion bill of R1,763,878 is simply inconceiva­ble in the face of the devastatin­g financial state of our nation.

“Furthermor­e, it makes a mockery of 13-million South Africans who continue to live in informalit­y, many still without access to basic water and sanitation services.”

IT MAKES A MOCKERY OF 13-MILLION SOUTH AFRICANS WHO LIVE IN INFORMALIT­Y, MANY STILL WITHOUT ACCESS TO BASIC SERVICES

Emma Louise Powell DA settlement­s spokespers­on

Powell said the DA would make applicatio­ns under the Promotion of Access to Informatio­n Act to access all invoices submitted to the department of water & sanitation by all members of the advisory committee.

She called on the newly appointed water & sanitation minister, Senzo Mchunu, to immediatel­y disband the advisory committee and initiate a formal investigat­ion into Mdekazi’s “fat-cat” travel bill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa