Sunday Tribune

Facelift for Winnie’s house

The Brandfort house to which Madikizela-mandela was banished is to be restored

- LOYISO SIDIMBA loyiso.sidimba@inl.co.za

THE modest Free State property in which late Struggle icon Winnie Madikizela-mandela was banished to in the late 1970s by the apartheid regime is set to finally receive a R4 million facelift.

The project in Brandfort is forging ahead after several years of delays blamed on the change-over of financial systems by the Independen­t Developmen­t Trust (IDT) which managed it. The delays were also attributed to the national Department of Arts and Culture not receiving value for money and being overcharge­d on profession­al fees and work stoppages.

The initial announceme­nt that Madikizela-mandela’s house would become a heritage site was made in 2005. The project was scheduled to be completed by January 2015. But in November 2017, the department told Parliament it expected the refurbishm­ent to be completed within 18 months at a cost of an estimated budget of R2.7m.

Documents seen by Independen­t Media show the department has set aside R4m for the restoratio­n and constructi­on of the existing monument.

The department’s implementi­ng agent, Tshwane-based Risimati Consulting Engineers and Project Managers, is also looking for a company with a Constructi­on Industry Developmen­t Board registrati­on allowing it to complete general building works of up to R4m.

Madikizela-mandela spent nearly a decade at the house on Mothupi Street in Majwamasoe­u Township.

According to the documents, the project will include the restoratio­n of the existing memorial house, clinic and external works as well as the constructi­on of a new internet hub and toilets.

The clinic was establishe­d by Madikizela-mandela but was later bombed by apartheid security forces.

Meanwhile, Risimati Consulting Engineers has replaced the Idt-appointed Archlive Architects as the principal agent.

It is still unclear when the project, which is dubbed the restoratio­n and additional building works to the Winnie Madikizela-mandela House Heritage Museum, will be completed.

Risimati Consulting Engineers declined to comment.

In April last year after Madikizela-mandela’s death, DA Free State leader Patricia Kopane asked the Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) to probe alleged fraud and misappropr­iation of the project’s funds.

At the time, Kopane said of the over R1.8m approved for the project, about R600 000 had already been paid to the contractor and the architect.

Since 2005, over R11m was budgeted and R3m in expenses incurred by early last year, said Kopane.

Yesterday, Kopane said she was still waiting for a response from the SIU.

She accused the ANC of using the project as an electionee­ring tool.

”They had so many years to refurbish the house. If you go there, nothing has changed. It’s still the same house, there is just a security guard,” Kopane said.

EFF Free State chairperso­n Mandisa Makhesini said the party had always wanted the project to be completed and for Madikizela-mandela to be honoured for her sacrifices in the anti-apartheid Struggle.

Makhesini also demanded that the money that was already spent and wasted on the restoratio­n process of the house and clinic be recovered and for those responsibl­e to be held accountabl­e.

She has further called for those found wanting to be barred from doing business with government.

It is thought that the project never started and that only a perimeter fence was put up.

Masilonyan­a Local Municipali­ty mayor Steve Koalane promised that the project would be completed before the end of the year if an applicatio­n to the deeds’ office to change the house’s ownership is successful.

Koalane said after Madikizela-mandela returned to Soweto in 1986 the house was registered under the Plaatjies family but both husband Geelbooi and wife Masabatha Jonas died intestate (without a will).

However, Koalane was confident that the applicatio­n which was lodged in October last year would succeed as there was no resistance from Plaatjies and Jonas’ daughter.

The municipali­ty will resubmit its applicatio­n to the deeds’ office by next week and constructi­on will resume once ownership is restored to Madikizela-mandela’s family.

 ?? | ANA ARCHIVES ?? WINNIE Madikizela-mandela lived at the now derelict house, number 802, in what was then called the black township in Brandfort until 1985.
| ANA ARCHIVES WINNIE Madikizela-mandela lived at the now derelict house, number 802, in what was then called the black township in Brandfort until 1985.
 ??  ?? Winnie Madikizela-mandela
Winnie Madikizela-mandela

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