Cape Argus

ANC wants provincial PPE procuremen­t probed

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

THE ANC has called for an investigat­ion into personal protective equipment (PPE) procuremen­t by the province, with a particular focus on the provincial education department where the party suspects corruption.

This week, Finance and Economic Opportunit­ies MEC David Maynier released the provincial Covid-19 procuremen­t disclosure report for January 2021, which amounted to R66.2 million, of which R66.1m was spent by provincial department­s.

Maynier said: “This edition of the report confirms that, to date, R1.9 billion has been committed towards Covid-19-related expenditur­e across department­s and public entities in the 2020/21 financial year in the Western Cape.”

He said: “R907.6m, or 47.2%, of all Covid-19 expenditur­e by provincial department­s and public entities was spent with small, medium and micro-enterprise­s (SMMEs), which exceeds the national target of 30%.”

Following the publishing of the report, ANC provincial finance spokespers­on Nomi Nkondlo questioned why, once again, Masiqhame Trading 1057 CC appeared to get the lion’s share of the Western Cape Education Department’s (WCED) Covid-19 spending.

In August last year, the Argus reported that Masiqhame, an SMME with no website or online presence, received just under half of the R682.5m that the provincial government spent on PPE just for supplying the WCED.

Yesterday, Nkondlo said: “The ANC is concerned about the seeming capture of the WCED by a single company Masiqhame Trading 1057, that gets preference for the entire department’s expenditur­e.

“The ANC calls on the SIU to expedite its investigat­ions into this provincial government’s expenditur­e, so the report can shed light on some of the concerning trends from the province’s Covid-19 spending.”

Asked about the relationsh­ip between Masiqhame Trading 1057 and the department, Education MEC Debbie Schäfer said: “The only relationsh­ip with the company I am aware of is as a supplier of goods. They are registered on the National Treasury’s supplier database, and were awarded a contract via a competitiv­e bidding process.

“Regarding the investigat­ion by the SIU, they are conducting an investigat­ion with which the department has co-operated fully. The SIU has made no findings against the WCED on the matter.”

Meanwhile, last week ANC education spokespers­on Khalid Sayed asked Schäfer about the Auditor-General’s findings against the WCED regarding procuremen­t and any remedial action that had been taken.

Schäfer said: “The AG concluded that there were some findings of irregulari­ties and internal control deficienci­es in respect of the supply of PPE. No remedial action was needed since no official contravene­d any rules.” The findings were in relation to the quality of cloth masks procured, she said.

 ??  ?? PERSONAL protective equipment.
PERSONAL protective equipment.

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