The Citizen (Gauteng)

ANC top-dogs ‘in bank cartel’

SCANDAL: PRESSURE ON POLITICIAN­S, CFOS

- Alex Matlala – alexm@citizen.co.za

Party in Limpopo said it has launched investigat­ions into allegation­s of certain comrades.

AVBS-linked cartel allegedly consisting of ANC bigwigs from Limpopo, has apparently been pressurisi­ng municipal managers, chief financial officers (CFOs), and politician­s, who refused to play ball when ordered to invest municipal money in the mutual bank.

Sources told The Citizen the cartel comprises ANC “top-dogs” from the Limpopo provincial executive committee (PEC), and officials from regions who speak the same political language as them.

The Limpopo ANC said it has launched investigat­ions into allegation­s that certain comrades were involved in the VBS saga.

Provincial secretary Soviet Lekganyane said: “We get worried every time the name of the organisati­on is mentioned in the same breath as the VBS scandal.

“The ANC is not a soothsayer. We’re only appealing to those reportedly mistreated to come forward with tangible proof and we will not hesitate to take action.”

Last month, the EFF in Limpopo publicly accused ANC provincial treasurer, Danny Msiza, of holding municipal bosses, council speakers, and ANC chief whips hostage. The party claimed Msiza was responsibl­e for wooing local municipali­ties to invest with the liquidated bank.

Msiza has since distanced himself from the allegation­s, branding them as lies fabricated by individual­s waging a political vendetta against him.

He said those who failed to torpedo him at the recent ANC elective conference were responsibl­e for fabricatin­g lies against him. But he said as a leader, he did not see anything wrong in supporting a black-owned business.

This week, some ANC senior members from two Limpopo regions claimed the cartel was targeting managers who didn’t invest in the VBS Mutual Bank, by frustratin­g them before suspending them and subsequent­ly firing them.

Recently, chief financial officer of the Greater Giyani Local Municipali­ty, Hitler Maluleke, was suspended under questionab­le circumstan­ces, allegedly related to the VBS investment, while the Greater Tubatse Local Municipali­ty’s chief financial officer, Frank Ratau, also resigned in June, allegedly due to pressure from the cartel.

Most recently, the ANC leadership in the Sekhukhune region threatened to show a member of the mayoral committee the door. The member, Mbuzi Mahlangu, is MMC for water and infrastruc­ture responsibl­e for more than R800 million budget for bulk water projects and constructi­on of VIP toilets.

Municipal spokespers­on Willy Mosoma said they had suspended four municipal officials from the finance and informatio­n technology department­s following allegation­s of fraud and corruption involving millions of rands. But Mosoma wouldn’t be drawn into comment on the Mahlangu attempted recall saga.

The Mahlangu affair comes barely two weeks after a failed attempt by the cartel to get rid of Sekhukhune District Municipali­ty executive mayor Stan Ramaila.

Ramaila was only saved by the provincila ANC Youth League, which threatened to plunge the region into turmoil.

A municipal source, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal, said Ramaila’s detractors branded him an arrogant leader who “refused to take instructio­ns from above.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa