Sunday Times

We have to make the water sector an island of integrity

We need to do things differentl­y in the face of the corruption and greed that deny people access to clean, reliable water — their birthright since 1996

- By MIKE MULLER and BARBARA SCHREINER

● By the end of the 2018/2019 financial year the department of water & sanitation (DWS) had a staggering R16.5bn in irregular expenditur­e and was, in the words of the chair of parliament’s standing committee on public accounts, insolvent.

On May 13 the minister of human settlement­s, water & sanitation, Lindiwe Sisulu, held a media conference to report on actions she has taken to deal with the rampant corruption and mismanagem­ent that resulted in this situation. Although the events that created this situation predated minister Sisulu’s tenure, she has the challenge of cleaning up the mess.

At the media conference, we handed the minister a report: “Money down the Drain: corruption in the South African water sector”. The report was commission­ed by the internatio­nal Water Integrity Network and SA’s Corruption Watch. Much of the informatio­n on which its analysis is based came from excellent investigat­ive work by the auditor-general and the media — SA can be grateful that these still do their work pretty well.

The report details corruption and gross mismanagem­ent not only in the DWS, but across the whole sector, including local government. The result is dry taps, dirty water, delayed projects and job creation, and massive escalation of project costs.

Based on our analysis, we made some simple but potentiall­y far-reaching recommenda­tions. In summary, they are to make the water sector an “island of integrity”. To achieve this, the first step is to recruit and support ethical and competent people to lead the sector; then to ensure that procuremen­t processes, through which much of water budgets are spent, are kept honest and that political influence is kept out; and finally, a culture of consequenc­es must be instilled so that malfeasanc­e is discourage­d and, where it occurs, is rooted out.

At the media conference, the DWS director-general reported that 11 senior managers and 86 lower level staff have been charged and found guilty; 21 cases have been opened with the police; and 13 forensic and 151 irregular expenditur­e cases are still under investigat­ion.

This is not enough.

No detail has been provided about the offences for which people were found guilty. It was stated that almost R18.2m might be recovered through this process, but this is just a tiny fraction of the R16.5bn classified as “irregular expenditur­e”.

It is a matter of public record that over R6bn was spent fruitlessl­y on just two items: the “War on Leaks” programme and the Giyani “emergency projects”.

Both were characteri­sed by questionab­le and probably illegal decisions. But the public does not know whether these issues were included in the reported investigat­ions and what consequenc­es there have been. Since 2012, the Special Investigat­ing Unit has been tasked with a number of water-related investigat­ions, but we don’t know the outcomes.

Our report also provides extensive evidence that the appointmen­t of directors and senior staff in sector institutio­ns and the department facilitate­d corruption and mismanagem­ent. This dimension of the problem has yet to be acknowledg­ed and reflected in a reform of appointmen­t and recruitmen­t processes. It is vital to end the vicious cycle of unsuitable appointmen­ts.

The department, with many of its senior officials still suspended or in acting positions, is in need of a serious overhaul.

Finally, procuremen­t of goods and services must support the implementa­tion of coherent programmes. Our report outlined the many strategies that corrupt individual­s use to bypass basic procuremen­t rules — proclaimin­g an emergency, alleging that there is only one supplier for essential services, or fraudulent­ly rigging tender adjudicati­on processes. Ethical leadership is needed to uproot these processes.

To address these issues, the governance of the sector must be improved. In particular, independen­t oversight is needed of key regulatory decisions such as the issuing of formal directives as well as senior appointmen­ts. It was telling that the CEO of one water board could tell a parliament­ary committee that he would have lost his job if he didn’t implement an illegal instructio­n. An amendment to the Water Services Act is urgently needed to clarify the rights and obligation­s of the minister and water boards in relation to the vexed issue of directives.

The crying need to make the water sector an island of integrity has been laid bare by the Covid-19 crisis.

SA’s shocking inequaliti­es have been revealed by the number of people without access to reliable and safe water. Vulnerable communitie­s have been made even more so by their need to find water to wash their hands. It is evident that, in many cases, this resource is denied to people because of greed, incompeten­ce or the desire to fund political ambitions.

The first step must be to create ethical leadership in the sector. The minister has already begun to instil a culture of consequenc­es. She now has the opportunit­y to ensure that all appointmen­ts, whether of senior officials in the DWS, or members of boards of water entities, are of people with unimpeacha­ble track records. This step is critical in breaking the cycle of systemic corruption.

But she will need support to turn things around. Globally, civil society has played a critical role in pushing for action against corruption. In SA the health sector has establishe­d an anti-corruption forum that brings together government agencies, civil society and the private sector to tackle corruption. This model could well be adopted by the water sector.

In 1996 we enshrined the right to water in our constituti­on. A toxic mix of corruption, incompeten­ce and mismanagem­ent has voided that right for millions of South Africans. The Covid-19 crisis is a wake-up call. The level of corruption in the sector is a wake-up call. We need to do things differentl­y in the sector, and we need to do it now.

Muller is a visiting professor at the Wits School of Governance. Schreiner is executive director of the Water Integrity Network. Both were senior officials in the department of water affairs and are currently members of the minister’s advisory committee of water specialist­s

 ?? Picture: Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty Images ?? Covid-19 brought into sharp focus the struggles of some people in SA to find even enough clean water to wash their hands, to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.
Picture: Per-Anders Pettersson/Getty Images Covid-19 brought into sharp focus the struggles of some people in SA to find even enough clean water to wash their hands, to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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