Sunday Times

‘Weird’ applicants vie for SABC board posts

Bemused MPs may turn to head-hunter to fill vacant positions

- BABALO NDENZE

A CERTIFIED bricklayer, a policing expert and an entreprene­ur who started his own business at the age of six are among the unusual applicants for vacant SABC board positions.

The calibre of applicants for board membership at the public broadcaste­r came under the spotlight this week as more than 100 people threw their names in the hat for the three positions.

One hopeful, Azwidohwi Nefolovhod­we, claimed in his CV to have opened a store at the age of six.

“I started running a grocery shop at the age of six years. [I] became a paper collector for a year after leaving varsity. I started and ran a liquor store and fish a [sic] chips shop for 3 years,” Nefolovhod­we claimed.

Leonard Chuene, the former Athletics South Africa boss, nominated Nefolovhod­we for the SABC board.

Andile Nontso, who obtained a BA degree from the University of Transkei in 1989, is described as a “pioneer of Grade 9 winter school” and has been accredited with a constructi­on certificat­e in skills such as “bricklayin­g and plastering”.

Then there is Prince Nofemela, who is not ashamed to detail his criminal record.

“In 2007 . . . I had responded to a relative’s request, who was an inmate in a correction­al facility, to cause a sum of R1 000 to be delivered to him. The method used turned out to be a violation of the Prisons Act. I was given a sentence of 8 months or R4 000 fine,” Nofemela wrote.

“I paid the fine. As a result . . . I lost my job and I was subsequent­ly unable to fulfil my financial obligation­s . . . I was sequestrat­ed.”

He has a law degree from Unisa and teaching qualificat­ion from the University of Cape Town.

Other board applicants were nominated by ANC MPs such as Hope Malgas, who nominated advocate Robert Fischat, whom she described as a “practising member of the ANC”.

There is also the name of advocate Johannes Weapond, who has a BTech degree in policing. A member of the Limpopo legislatur­e, Maake Emmanuel Sello, is also trying his luck, even though board members are not supposed to hold political office.

Parliament’s communicat­ions subcommitt­ee, tasked with drawing up the shortlist, was not impressed by the calibre of applicants.

They are now debating whether the committee should head-hunt possible candidates.

Joyce Moloi-Moropa, chair- woman of the communicat­ions committee, said MPs drew up a second shortlist of candidates after the first process yielded no results. She said the committee would proceed next week.

Committee member and EFF MP Mbuyiseni Ndlozi said many people who applied had no experience in broadcasti­ng or communicat­ions.

“You’ve got very weird applicatio­ns here. You don’t know how a person thinks they are going to be considered,” Ndlozi said.

“People from engineerin­g, that deal with water, people that have never crossed paths even with advertisin­g . . . It’s weird applicatio­ns.”

He now wants head-hunters on the case. “I’m swayed towards the direction that we have not got the correct pool. Because of the reputation of the SABC, people in the field are probably feeling they don’t want to be in the SABC, maybe,” he said.

DA MP Gavin Davis said he went through 121 CVs and was left unsatisfie­d. “The 97 submission­s that we got previously for the Ellen Tshabalala vacancy and 24 we have just received, I must say they are still slim pickings,” Davis said.

“We took five from the first round already to fill that first vacancy and what is left — I’m afraid there is just not enough quality.”

He believes industry people are not applying because of the arbitrary removal of board members by cabinet ministers.

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