Cape Argus

Ramaphosa authorises probe

- MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA mayibongwe.maqhina@inl.co.za

A MANDELA Day event hosted by the uMgungundl­ovu District Municipali­ty has come back to haunt the local council.

This comes after President Cyril Ramaphosa authorised the Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) to probe procuremen­t-related matters in the KwaZulu-Natal district municipali­ty, which is known to host its annual Mandela Day marathon.

In a proclamati­on published recently, Ramaphosa said: “The municipali­ty or the State suffered losses that may be recovered. “I deem it necessary that the allegation­s be investigat­ed and civil proceeding­s emanating from such investigat­ion should be adjudicate­d upon.” The SIU-authorised investigat­ion will deal with the procuremen­t of an events management company hired to organise the event. The event took place in December 2017.

The terms of reference for the probe cover allegation­s of serious maladminis­tration, unlawful conduct by employees of uMgungundl­ovu District Municipali­ty, and unlawful expenditur­e of public money. The terms of reference also extend to negligent loss of public funds, an offence as defined in the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act.

The SIU probe will cover the period between January 2017 and the date of the publicatio­n of the proclamati­on.

Meanwhile, the SIU has also been mandated to look into the affairs of arms manufactur­er Denel.

Ramaphosa said the SIU had to also probe irregular measures concerning the misappropr­iation of proprietar­y and intellectu­al property rights in Denel’s air-to-air missiles, stand-off weapons and surface target missiles.

This comes four months after the president authorised the SIU to investigat­e the awarding of bursaries by Denel, along with the procuremen­t of steel fabricatio­n services and steel fabricated goods, as well as legal services.

Also to be probed is the procuremen­t of services to develop a white paper relating to the validity of advance payments of bank guarantees on all contracts entered into by Denel and the Armaments Corporatio­n of South Africa. The initial proclamati­on came nearly a year after Denel made headlines when it was reported that it improperly awarded a R1.1million bursary to former North West premier Supra Mahumapelo’s son, Oarabile.

The state-owned entity initially denied the bursary was awarded improperly, saying “these allegation­s are false”, and “the bursary awarded was made to three students based on the same criteria and/or considerat­ions”.

Last December, Denel’s chairperso­n of the audit committee Talib Sadik said Denel had terminated Mahumapelo’s bursary agreement after an investigat­ion made several findings.

The probe had found that the school where Mahumapelo was studying to be a pilot was not an institutio­n approved by Denel, and that the pilot bursaries were not advertised in terms of Denel’s bursary policy.

It was also found that the bursary was granted without following the proper selection process.

 ?? | HANNAH MCKAY Reuters File ?? PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa has authorised the Special Investigat­ing Unit to investigat­e procuremen­t issues with respect to the uMgungundl­ovu District Municipali­ty’s hosting of the 2017 Mandela Day festivitie­s.
| HANNAH MCKAY Reuters File PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa has authorised the Special Investigat­ing Unit to investigat­e procuremen­t issues with respect to the uMgungundl­ovu District Municipali­ty’s hosting of the 2017 Mandela Day festivitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa