Sunday Times

Audit chief raises alarm as Zulu king blows millions

- NATHI OLIFANT and BONGANI MTHETHWA

THE office of the auditorgen­eral is concerned about Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini’s finances.

The state of the Royal Household Trust, meant to make King Zwelithini and his family of six wives and their 40 children self-sustainabl­e, is so dire the auditor-general has cast doubt on the trust’s ability to “operate as a going concern”.

This comes after the trust’s annual report for the year ended in March, presented before the KwaZulu-Natal legislatur­e last month, revealed that liabilitie­s exceeded assets by R3.2-million, and that it had a R539 000 deficit.

All this “may cast significan­t doubt on the public entity’s ability to operate as a going concern”, said the auditor-general in his report.

The report also found the trust — set up in 2009 — had awarded contracts to bidders who had not declared past supply-chain practices such as fraud, abuse of supplychai­n management systems and nonperform­ance, and to contractor­s not registered with the Constructi­on Industry Developmen­t Board.

A R1.5-million bill for the king’s lavish wedding to Swazi-born Queen Zola Mafu in July last year remains unpaid. He gets more than R50million in annual support from the government on top of his R1-million salary.

King Zwelithini’s wedding coincided with his 60th birthday celebratio­ns, which cost R4.2-million, and was the top item among the royal family’s expenses last year. That bill was only settled last month.

Former Royal Household Trust chairman Judge Jerome Ngwenya this week said the king was embarrasse­d by the financial troubles and had expressed this to premier Senzo Mchunu.

“The king was very saddened by this, very saddened. This was too bad for him. He reported this to the government. Officials and the director-general have never explained to us why they always under-transferre­d funds to the trust which led to this. That’s why His Majesty was embarrasse­d by that episode,” said Ngwenya.

It was difficult to break down the education cost for the king’s children “because the king’s children are king’s children and there should not be an age limit when they stop to be taken care of”.

But Ngwenya, who is also the king’s legal adviser, lashed out at the auditorgen­eral this week, saying he lacked “consistenc­y as he still cannot differenti­ate between the royal household department and the trust”.

In his foreword in the trust’s annual report, Ngwenya lamented the absence of a common understand­ing between the king and the royal family on the one hand, and Mchunu and the provincial executive on the other, on what the role of the trust is.

“As things stand there is a big gulf,” said Ngwenya.

Sipho Nkosi, chairman of the provincial standing committee on public accounts, said it would not comment on the report because the auditor-general had already made his finding, but it was satisfied the trust was starting to operate optimally.

 ?? Picture: SIYABONGA MOSUNKUTU ?? CARVING UP THE CAKE: King Goodwill Zwelithini talks to Queen Sibongile MaDlamini Zulu while the ANC’s S’bu Ndebele looks on at the king’s 60th birthday celebratio­ns at the Durban Internatio­nal Convention Centre last year
Picture: SIYABONGA MOSUNKUTU CARVING UP THE CAKE: King Goodwill Zwelithini talks to Queen Sibongile MaDlamini Zulu while the ANC’s S’bu Ndebele looks on at the king’s 60th birthday celebratio­ns at the Durban Internatio­nal Convention Centre last year

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