Mail & Guardian

How Eastern Cape blew R23m on

Land that cost less than R1m in 2007 was bought by the Eastern Cape government just six years later for R23m, despite a land claim case hanging over it. And then the building tender went sour…

- Khaya Koko

The Eastern Cape government has paid a vastly inflated sum for land earmarked for a housing developmen­t — which was never built — despite the fact that a rural community had already lodged a land claim for what it says is its ancestral land.

The saga began in January 2013 when the provincial government paid more than R22.9-million to purchase a 28-hectare piece of land on the outskirts of Qonce (formerly King William’s Town) with mooted plans to build houses and related infrastruc­ture on it.

Several sources, who asked to remain anonymous, have alleged that the purchase price was grossly inflated. A property search conducted by the Mail & Guardian shows that the previous owners of the land, Cosmic Gold Trading, paid R783 000 in 2007 for the property, known as Erf 2700.

In August 2017, the former provincial human settlement­s MEC Helen Sauls-august confirmed that the Eastern Cape government had purchased the land for more than R22.9-million in 2013.

Sauls-august, who is currently the speaker in the Eastern Cape legislatur­e, told the legislatur­e then that the market value of the land was R20-million at the time of purchase. However, the M&G investigat­ion found that just three years after the purchase of Erf 2700 in 2013, it was valued by the municipali­ty at just over R2-million.

In her August 2017 legislatur­e reply, Sauls-august confirmed that the housing developmen­t had failed, and that no plans were afoot to revive it. “The department granted two private developers, Moladi Building Communitie­s and Camel Rock, permission to proceed with the developmen­t of Erf 2700 as a joint venture. Moladi withdrew from the proposed developmen­t and the project did not proceed,” Sauls-august replied.

But, at the time the provincial government bought the land, it was already under a land claim instituted in May 1995 by the late Reverend Benson Sokopo on behalf of the community.

In a July 2016 Government Gazette, public comments were opened before the rural developmen­t and land reform department could finalise its decision on whether the land claim would be successful.

On one side of Masingatha, there lies a typical rural community, with resplenden­t green rolling hills and brightly coloured houses adorning the working-class village.

The other side of Erf 2700 consists of the buzzing Qonce central business district, which includes a police station, sports grounds belonging to Dale College Boys’ High School and a Superspar precinct known as Nick’s Foods.

Three years after the provincial government bought the land under dispute, it reached out to companies to develop it for housing. Moladi was awarded the contract in July 2016, but pulled out in April 2017 after the company was allegedly forced by the former human settlement­s provincial head of department, Gaster Sharpley, to partner with the controvers­ial company, Camel Rock, which had been embroiled in corruption allegation­s in the province.

Moladi’s bid documents, which the M&G has seen, did not mention Camel Rock, which had submitted an exact duplicate of Moladi’s tender with only a Camel Rock covering letter replacing Moladi’s.

Sources said Moladi pulled out of the joint venture because of Camel Rock’s contentiou­s past, and because Moladi had not chosen it as a partner.

This is not the first time Sharpley and Camel Rock have partnered on a project that has been dogged by allegation­s of corruption.

In May, the M&G reported that, in a November 2013 treasury report Camel Rock and Sharpley’s department were implicated in gross financial misconduct to the tune of R341-million that disappeare­d into thin air, despite being earmarked for much-needed housing developmen­t in the Eastern Cape.

The treasury’s report states that the only money it could track was R61-million that was paid to Camel Rock in the 2012-13 financial year for work not done.

Of the R61-million, Camel Rock “illegally transferre­d” R4.8-million to “11 personal bank accounts, and some of which [was] used to buy a top-of-the-range Chevrolet Trailblaze­r”.

The report further stated that “only a vacant piece of land” stood where the houses were meant to have been erected in East London.

Sharpley was also implicated. He was found to have contravene­d several laws and regulation­s governing public finances in the distributi­on of the R341-million.

Sharpley, who the report said should have been discipline­d, was transferre­d to the Kwazulu-natal public works department, where he has been on suspension since November last year for alleged corruption.

Sources have accused Sharpley of being the brains behind the Masingatha housing developmen­t, as he was the provincial housing department’s accounting officer at the time of the “forced” joint venture.

In a statement to the M&G on behalf of Moladi, director Camalynne Botes said: “It’s the most tragic thing to discover that there is no real compassion or sincerity in those spheres of government that have pledged to better the lives of so many people who survive on such promises.

“If the only chance we are offered to contribute to South Africa is on such terms, then at the very least, we must be able withstand the lure of corruption at whatever the cost.”

Lwandile Sicwetsha, Sauls

August’s spokespers­on in the speaker’s office, said the former MEC would not respond to the M&G’S questions — about why the department flushed R23-million — because she was no longer in that portfolio.

Sharpley said he could not comment as the M&G’S questions related to the department of human settlement­s in the Eastern Cape, and the decisions he made there were in his capacity as accounting officer.

“I have no right to respond outside of that official capacity. It is therefore only right that I allow the formal communicat­ion protocol to be followed.”

Several high-ranking sources, who spoke to the M&G on condition of anonymity, alleged that the price the provincial government paid for the Masingatha land was “highly inflated”, and was supposedly purchased to push “a corrupt housing developmen­t”.

The sources’ allegation­s seem to be supported by the valuation documents.

On 7 September 2016, the Buffalo City Metropolit­an Municipali­ty, under which Masingatha falls, had valued the land at R2-million. On the same day, the South African Property Transfer Guide appraised the land at just under R1.9-million.

“I am certain that the marketrela­ted value of the land parcel had not decreased by 962% within a three-year period from R20-million in 2013, when the provincial government bought the land, to R2-million when the Masingatha community’s land claim was deemed successful,” said a source, who asked to remain anonymous.

Tabisa Poswa, the current human settlement­s head of department, refuted claims that the purchase price was inflated. Poswa said the R22.9-million was based on “a quality property evaluator”, saying the price of Erf 2700 was comparable with the three land parcels adjacent to it.

She also dismissed allegation­s that the provincial department blew millions of rand because the housing developmen­t had stalled since the awarding of contract in 2016.

“The department has already started the process of the developmen­t of the land in question,

wherein the process of expression of interest was finalised. However, the appointed service provider was stopped at the planning stage due to [a] land claim instituted against the property,” she said.

“The department disagrees that the money was blown as the land is an investment registered under the provincial government of the Eastern Cape and land property does not depreciate. As soon as the land claim is resolved by the department of rural developmen­t and land reform, the [provincial housing] department will continue with the developmen­t as planned,” Poswa added.

However, the land claim was in fact already finalised by the national government, and the Masingatha community received

more than R20.5-million in restitutio­n in March 2017.

When contacted for comment, Camel Rock director Thanduxolo Zuka responded by sending the M&G a list of questions in turn, including about source documents

and who gave his company the R23million project.

When the M&G provided the informatio­n, Zuka said: “I don’t have a comment on this issue; human settlement­s must deal with this matter.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: Andy Mkosi ?? No comment, denial: The 28-hectare Masingatha area (left) in Qonce has seen no new housing developmen­ts since a proposed scheme stalled amid corruption allegation­s. Graft-tainted Gasper Sharpley (above left) was the head of human settlement­s at the time that Camel Rock was strong-armed into the tender, but says he cannot comment now that he is no longer in his former position, while current department head Tabisa Poswa (above right) denies the government paid an inflated price for the land.
Photo: Andy Mkosi No comment, denial: The 28-hectare Masingatha area (left) in Qonce has seen no new housing developmen­ts since a proposed scheme stalled amid corruption allegation­s. Graft-tainted Gasper Sharpley (above left) was the head of human settlement­s at the time that Camel Rock was strong-armed into the tender, but says he cannot comment now that he is no longer in his former position, while current department head Tabisa Poswa (above right) denies the government paid an inflated price for the land.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa