Mail & Guardian

CPUT’s vice-head gets R2m to sit at home

- Bongekile Macupe

Nine months, and counting, is the period that Dr Prins Nevhutalu, the vicechance­llor of the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), has been on suspension. During this time he has been paid almost R2-million to sit at home.

The university did not answer detailed questions sent to it or say why the disciplina­ry process was taking so long to be concluded. Spokespers­on Lauren Kansley said the CPUT was not at liberty to comment. Nevhutalu also said he would not comment on the case while it was ongoing.

But the Mail & Guardian understand­s that it is Nevhutalu who has been dragging his feet.

“When he has to appear for a hearing, he postpones,” said an insider with knowledge of the case. “The guy is being paid, so he has nothing to lose.”

The CPUT’s latest annual report shows that Nevhutalu is paid about R2.6-million a year or about R217000 a month.

The person who signed Nevhutalu’s suspension letter, former chairperso­n of the university’s council Mbulelo Bikwani, has since resigned without the case being concluded.

The M&G has seen a letter written by Bikwani, addressed to Nevhutalu on October 18 2016, advising him that the council — the university’s highest decision-making body — intended to place him on special leave.

The charges against Nevhutalu are: gross derelictio­n of duty, gross insubordin­ation, gross negligence, breach of trust and incompatib­ility.

The gross derelictio­n charge relates to an incident in which the vice-chancellor allegedly lost about R2.6million for the university, because he failed to participat­e in the negotiatio­n of a departure agreement with a former executive director of finance.

He is also charged with failing to implement a new remunerati­on scale for employees, which resulted in a go-slow. This forced the university to bring in an external service provider at a cost of R150000. The council also saw it as gross insubordin­ation on Nevhutalu’s part for failing to comply with its lawful and reasonable instructio­ns.

Nevhutalu’s failure to implement the new remunerati­on scale affected the relationsh­ip between the university and trade unions, and “compromise­d the trust which has been establishe­d amongst the parties”, according to the letter.

Unions at the CPUT started calling for the resignatio­n of Nevhutalu as early as February last year.

Sello Nkwana, deputy chairperso­n of the National Health Education and Allied Workers’ Union at the CPUT, said the union did not know what was happening with the case. “He failed CPUT. The suspension process must be concluded and council must let him go. The system will collapse if he comes back. He is arrogant and unprincipl­ed.”

Nevhutalu was appointed vicechance­llor in 2013. Political analyst Professor Sipho Seepe, who was shortliste­d for the job, withdrew from the process a few days before the council made its announceme­nt.

Seepe doubted Nevhutalu’s credibilit­y to lead the university and called the process a “sham”. He accused the CPUT of incompeten­ce and not taking its own minimum requiremen­ts seriously for short-listing a person who had last published an academic article 20 years ago.

Dr John Volmink, the chairperso­n of Umalusi, the Council for Quality Assurance in General and Further Education and Training, is the acting vice-chancellor.

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