Cape Argus

Eastern Cape ‘mismanagem­ent’ proves we are a nation of thieves

- NAUSHAD OMAR Athlone

IT WAS reported that 12 000 employees of the Eastern Cape government are on permanent sick leave for anywhere between three months and six years, and all are drawing full salaries. We are not even counting ghost employees and suspended employees. No wonder the place is dysfunctio­nal.

Premier Phumulo Masualle, you said they must do the right thing and resign. I say to you, premier, you do the right thing and fire the lot.

And Premier Masualle, you won’t be doing this for the unemployed youth of the Eastern Cape like you said, you would be doing this since it is the right thing to do. And charge these people for fraud – only jail time will prevent further and continued abuse of the system. And you would be doing it for the hard pressed taxpayers of South Africa who have to work their fingers to the bone to pay their taxes which go to pay the salaries of your employees (both visible and invisible).

If you want to create jobs for the youth, create an environmen­t which is conducive to business and investment so that real, tax-paying, sustainabl­e private sector jobs are created.

The government should be the last port of call for jobs, not the first one. And use some of the R58 billion you were given by the taxpayer for fixing the road and civil infrastruc­ture in your province which is on the verge of collapse. And ensure there is no talk of nationalis­ation of farms and businesses, cut out the red tape, remove the cadres who are mismanagin­g your educationa­l and health department­s and your municipali­ties. That would be the only way to create sustainabl­e jobs and a functionin­g province.

We have a public sector bill of R470 billion for 1.3 million employees which translates to R360 000 per employee. Multiply that by 12 000 and we have a total waste of R4.3bn per annum, ie 7.5 percent of your total budget. That is equivalent to 17 Nkandlas a year – a possible new form of money.?

That is only one province controlled by the ANC. Then add the billions from overpricin­g and tender fraud and other corrupt activities. Just imagine how many Nkandlas the whole country is stealing and wasting per annum and then Zuma’s Nkandla pales in comparison.

By concentrat­ing on Zuma’s Nkandla, we have missed the 1 000 Nkandlas stolen and wasted by ordinary public sector workers a year. This is just the public sector. The money stolen in the private sector is estimated to be about 2 000 Nkandlas a year – a combined theft of 3 000 Nkandlas stolen each year. South Africa can safely be branded a nation of thieves.

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