The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Tshwane RDP project is corrupt’

WRONG RECIPIENTS: BACKLOG OF MORE THAN 200 000

- Virginia Keppler – virginiak@citizen.co.za

Youngsters, informal settlement dwellers got homes instead of people on wait list.

The waiting list in the Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t Programme (RDP) in Tshwane has not only been corrupted, but it is opaque and partly to blame for the backlog of more than 200 000 RDP houses due by the City of Tshwane.

Along with this housing backlog – and possibly due to it – the capital has seen 180 informal settlement­s mushroomin­g and this has been used as a reason to allocate houses to beneficiar­ies who do not appear on the waiting list.

The Tshwane member of the mayoral committee (MMC) for housing and human settlement­s, Mandla Nkomo, said when the DA-led administra­tion took office, they realised the waiting list for RDP housing contained the names of several very young people, which immediatel­y set off alarm bells.

“People as young as 19 and 21 years were on the same waiting list as those who applied for housing in 1996. This is clearly a sign of corruption, and a diversion from the original waiting list. You cannot have a person who was born in the ’80s on the same waiting list as those who applied for housing in 1996,” Nkomo said.

The RDP, a socio-economic policy framework, was implemente­d by the ANC under late former president Nelson Mandela in 1994.

Nkomo said it is important for city residents to note that the city can only build 3 500 houses in each financial year.

He said the DA-led administra­tion has been trying to clean the list of corruption and to make it as transparen­t as possible.

Two years ago they raised the issue of the waiting list with the minister of human settlement­s and housing of the time, Lindiwe Sisulu, while the department also voiced their concerns.

“We wanted them to allow the city to publish the waiting list to be transparen­t and so that communitie­s can have a clear view of where their names on the list was, but nothing came of it.

“This would be a way to help rid the list of all corruption,” Nkomo said.

He said the former ANC administra­tion in most cases also ignored the waiting list and, instead of giving housing to the real beneficiar­ies, they moved people from informal settlement­s into the RDP houses.

Informal settlement­s bring about their own set of irregulari­ties, he said.

For instance, you will find that a man from Limpopo already owns a RDP house in his hometown, but because he lives in an informal settlement in Tshwane due to work migration, he benefits when the entire informal settlement is moved into houses,

People as young as 19 and 21 were on the same waiting list as those who applied in 1996.

Mandla Nkomo Housing MMC for Tshwane

leaving the ones on the waiting list still out in the cold.

Nkomo said to stamp out corruption and to make sure the right beneficiar­ies were on the waiting list, a Joint Allocation Committee has been establishe­d, which will remove inappropri­ate names.

“We need to take care of our senior citizens and disabled people first. Young people should go to schools and one day build their own houses,” Nkomo said.

According to him, the city will start with the role-out of serviced stands in Mabopane, Gatsebe, Kapanong, Rama City, Zithobeni, Refilwe and Hammanskra­al. “Some of these projects are continuing from the previous financial years and some will start in the 2018/2019 financial year.

“There are 4 778 stands that are nearing completion this year and some will be completed next year,” Nkomo said.

The city is planning four rental structures with 3 185 units. These are the Townlands Social Housing Project, Chantelle Ext 39, Timberland­s Social Housing and the Sunnyside Apartments social housing project.

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