The Citizen (Gauteng)

Premier ‘didn’t act against graft’

MATHABATHA: UNION, DA WANT HIM TO ‘STEP ASIDE’

- Alex Matlala news@citizen.co.za

Calls are mounting for Limpopo premier Stan Mathabatha to take special leave in order to allow investigat­ions into allegation­s of corruption against him to run without any interferen­ce.

The plea comes after the National Education, Health and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu) in Limpopo laid charges of corruption against him last Wednesday.

“We can confirm that there is an inquiry of allegation­s of corruption laid against the office of the premier of Limpopo Mr Stan Mathabatha by Nehawu Limpopo,” Hawks national spokeswoma­n Colonel Katlego Mogale said yesterday.

Nehawu alleged Mathabatha was an accessory to crime because he failed to take action against several tender irregulari­ties and malfeasanc­e in his office.

Nehawu provincial secretary Jacob Adam said knowing that corruption was taking place and doing nothing was tantamount to committing crime.

“Mathabatha was quite aware of the criminal activities taking place in his office. But yet he chose not only to ignore, but he instead also failed to take action against those involved,” he said.

“Mathabatha must just face the music like any other citizen. Ironically, it is Mathabatha himself who claimed he would fight corruption head-on when he took the reigns nearly a decade ago.

“But we are yet to see what he did about the escalating corruption taking place right in his watch. This is not a war, all we want is action and not talks and promises.”

Democratic Alliance provincial spokesman Risham Maharaj yesterday called on Mathabatha to “disclose all companies awarded contracts by his office for the past three years, including their boards of directors, value of each contract, the service being provided and the status of the contract”.

Mathabatha’s spokesman, Willy Mosoma said Nehawu’s claims were far-fetched and unsubstant­iated. “We’re not shaken by their empty threats. We know the Hawks will never investigat­e senseless charges...”

He was aware of criminal activities in his office

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