Cape Argus

Four senior city managers accused of corruption

- Jason Felix

LONG-serving City manager Achmat Ebrahiem, along with three other senior managers, must provide reasons why they should not be put on precaution­ary suspension following allegation­s of irregulari­ties and corruption worth millions.

The City of Cape Town full council, which sat behind closed doors, took the resolution yesterday following simmering tensions within the administra­tion and offices of Melissa Whitehead, the transport and urban developmen­t commission­er, and Craig Kesson, the chief resilience officer in Mayor Patricia de Lille’s office.

Kesson, who is married to DA MPL Mirelle Wenger, is the man tasked with leading the city’s efforts to avoid “Day Zero” – the day taps run dry.

The special meeting was called after Kesson asked for an investigat­ion into alleged irregulari­ties involving the city’s department of transport and urban developmen­t.

In a meeting of the transport and urban developmen­t committee last week, the opposition ANC alleged that Whitehead was guilty of nepotism for hiring two friends.

It further alleged that Whitehead was involved in unfairly advantagin­g a Chinese company, BYD, to secure a R249 million tender to manufactur­e 11 electric buses.

Kesson is almost certain to be sacked after four confidenti­al reports recommende­d his suspension owing to his alleged unauthoris­ed investigat­ions into Whitehead and allegation­s against Ebrahim.

De Lille released a statement after the meeting saying she was seeking legal opinion on the affidavit deposed by Kesson.

“In response to the affidavit deposed by the executive director of the directorat­e of the mayor, Craig Kesson, made under the provisions of the Protected Disclosure­s Act, I was not afforded an opportunit­y to respond to all the allegation­s contained in this affidavit. Once my lawyers have concluded my response to the content of the affidavit tabled at the special council meeting (yesterday), I will make it available by the end of the week,” she said.

Council speaker Dirk Smit said: “After a confidenti­al special council meeting I ruled that the agenda, and all other documentat­ion submitted to council, be open to the public in the interest of transparen­cy.”

The council’s audit committee will start an independen­t investigat­ion into all allegation­s surroundin­g the three officials. The resolution came after a motion by deputy mayor Ian Neilson asking that all the allegation­s be investigat­ed.

Kesson accused Ebrahim of misconduct for failure to properly implement the city’s contract for “station management and related services” for the MyCiTi bus service.

He also alleged that Ebrahim failed to properly consider or report to council allegation­s against Whitehead for alleged irregular‚ fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e in the management of a contract related to the city’s Rapid Transit Fare System. Kesson also alleges Ebrahim failed to report allegation­s of misconduct by Whitehead for alleged irregulari­ties involving payments for Volvo bus chassis.

Kesson claimed that Ebrahim failed to report Whitehead’s conduct regarding the city’s Foreshore Freeway Precinct tender. Ebrahim did not respond to calls for comment.

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