Mail & Guardian

Ekurhuleni mayor’s jobs plan an election stunt, says EFF

- Lunga Mzangwe

Barely two weeks after the ANC and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) mended their relationsh­ip in the Ekurhuleni municipali­ty, they appear to be at loggerhead­s again over a job creation initiative that aims to employ 16 000 people.

The Red Berets have labelled the programme announced by executive mayor Nkosindiph­ile Xhakaza of the ANC as nothing more than a populist stunt aimed at boosting the ruling party’s campaign ahead of the 29 May general elections.

In his maiden state of the city address this week, Xhakaza promised that the metro would unveil the first 1400 cohort of beneficiar­ies of the initiative next month.

It will employ people under the expanded public works (EPWP), public work and community works (CWP) programmes.

His announceme­nt drew criticism from the EFF, which co-governs the metro with the ANC, and is in charge of crucial portfolios, including finance.

Member of the mayoral committee for finance Nkululeko Dunga of the EFF said Xhakaza had made the announceme­nt as an election ploy.

“Our people are not stupid. They are very well aware that this is just a temporary engagement for political expediency purposes,” he said.

The EFF was not oblivious to the high levels of unemployme­nt in the metro but advocated for quality and sustainabl­e jobs, something which the government programmes do not offer at the moment, Dunga added.

“The EPWP and CWP do not offer you benefits; it’s temporary and not permanent. At any given time, it will end.

“You rely on national grants which are limited to six months. What

is the joy of someone benefittin­g through the EPWP now, knowing very well it ends in six months and after that six months you don’t know you have an opportunit­y to form it again?” he asked.

In his address, Xhakaza also highlighte­d the city’s financial woes, which appear to have deepened in recent months, with the auditor general finding that in 2022-23 Ekurhuleni had regressed.

“We remain concerned about the state of our finances, mainly because we seem not to be collecting enough revenue. Our finances are also not aligned to our priorities,” he said.

“It is our resolve that those issues be resolved by the end of the current financial year, so that we are on track for yet another clean audit.”

Xhakaza said the city had had enough of crime and that the Ekurhuleni metro police department and other security agencies should show no mercy to criminals, while residents must also help the government reclaim the streets from drug lords, trafficker­s, pickpocket­s and other criminals.

“A serious clean-up campaign of our CBDS [central business districts] is not negotiable, and the chief of police and his team have received a briefing, and we expect immediate action,” Xhakaza said.

“These operations must be carried out by a multi-disciplina­ry by-law enforcemen­t team which will include the [police] and home affairs, as we believe that many of the people behind this may be undocument­ed foreign nationals.

“The EMPD must now arrest those criminals who violate our by-laws without fear or favour — we must take back our streets.”

Xhakaza said the city would soon introduce the Khanyisa Mhlali campaign involving electrific­ation projects, which would include the maintenanc­e of street lights and the roll-out of high mast lights.

 ?? ?? ‘Won’t work’: Ekurhuleni executive mayor Nkosindiph­ile Xhakaza has come under fire from the EFF.
‘Won’t work’: Ekurhuleni executive mayor Nkosindiph­ile Xhakaza has come under fire from the EFF.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa