Cape Times

More to follow Nene axing

- Staff Writer

FINANCE Minister Nhlanhla Nene may be just the first casualty in a series of high-profile victims of President Jacob Zuma’s latest cabinet shake-up.

There is strong speculatio­n in senior ANC circles that Minister in the Presidency Jeff Radebe and Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies are next in line for the axe, while the job of Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande hangs in the balance.

Independen­t Media was told talks with affected individual­s continued last night, with a strong case being made both for and against the removal of Nzimande.

Calls for his head have come from opposition parties as well as the ANC Youth League in the wake of the #FeesMustFa­ll student protests.

Nene, meanwhile, is believed to be headed for a senior post at the New Developmen­t Bank set up by the Brics partners and launched in October.

His axing is likely to cause a stir in business circles as he had portrayed continuity in fiscal policy, sticking to expenditur­e ceilings first announced by his predecesso­r, Pravin Gordhan, and giving short shrift to the government’s nuclear ambitions in his medium-term budget policy statement, despite the president’s enthusiasm for the project.

While the energy department had insisted procuremen­t of 9 600GW of nuclear generating capacity would begin within the financial year, Nene allocated a paltry R200 million towards “preparator­y” work for the procuremen­t process.

He would have been deep into preparatio­ns for delivering only his second Budget speech in February and the timing of his removal may reflect a difference of opinion over spending plans.

With business confidence at an all-time low and hard on the heels of a credit-rating downgrade, Nene’s removal is unlikely to go down well in the markets.

Apart from his apparent reluctance over nuclear, he had also clashed in recent weeks with Zuma confidante Dudu Myeni, the chair of the troubled SAA, over a bid to restructur­e a deal for the acquisitio­n of new airliners.

Concerns over the possible implicatio­ns for the fiscus of further appeals for assistance from state-owned enterprise­s were among the issues flagged by the ratings agencies in their latest assessment­s.

Zuma said in announcing the move Nene had “done well since his appointmen­t… during a difficult economic climate” and he would be redeployed in “another strategic position.

His replacemen­t, ANC MP and member of Parliament’s standing committee on finance, David van Rooyen, is a relative unknown with limited experience in government.

He holds an MSc Finance in economic policy from the University of London and a Masters Degree in Public Developmen­t and Management.

He is a former executive mayor of Merafong Municipali­ty and a former North West provincial chairperso­n of the South African Local Government Associatio­n.

This is the second shock appointmen­t to Zuma’s cabinet in just over two months, following the elevation of former Free State MEC Mosebenzi Zwane to the mineral resources portfolio at a time when the sector is in crisis. Like Zwane, Van Rooyen is not a member of the ANC’s national executive committee. His interests are soccer, golf, tennis, reading and hunting.

 ??  ?? OUT: NHLANHLA NENE
OUT: NHLANHLA NENE
 ??  ?? IN: DAVID VAN ROOYEN
IN: DAVID VAN ROOYEN

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