The Citizen (Gauteng)

R300 000 down drain

ANC: ELECTIVE CONFERENCE POSTPONED FOR SECOND TIME THIS MONTH

- Alex Japho Matlala news@citizen.co.za

Letter from acting secretary-general ‘advised us’ to put meeting on hold.

At a time the ANC National Executive Committee (NEC) faces acute financial woes that saw it fail to pay the salaries of its employees on time, the ANC in Limpopo spent over R300 000 on preparatio­ns for an elective conference that failed to sit twice in a month.

The much-anticipate­d, highly contested Sekhukhune ANC regional elective conference, which was supposed to sit at the weekend, has been postponed yet again.

The ANC announced last week the conference would seat last week Saturday.

But before dawn, party acting regional secretary, Tala Mathope, wrote a communique to all branches, informing them that it was postponed and would reconvene yesterday.

Yesterday deputy chair Julia Mathebe told disillusio­ned delegates the conference was yet again postponed, owing it to disputes registered by disgruntle­d branch members during Branch General Council meetings (BGMs).

“We have received a letter from the office of the acting secretary-general Jessie Duarte, advising us to put the conference on hold,” said Mathope.

“There are two branches who registered a plight with the national dispute committee and their issues were not yet finalised.

“In light of this, we will then wait for their disputes to be put to bed before we continue with the conference”

Mathope said the region spent R300 000 for the conference.

“These costs included hiring of venue, marquee, catering, fuel and other vital logistics,” he said.

“But this is a drop in the ocean. Our people want the conference to go ahead.

“We are prepared to fight to the last drop of our blood, including going to loan sharks to bankroll the conference.”

The Citizen has been reliably informed that Frans Mohlala House (Limpopo ANC headquarte­rs in Polokwane) is bleeding financiall­y.

“Although we may not say this in public, we are faced with serious financial constraint­s,” said an ANC provincial executive committee member, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Yesterday, ANC deputy provincial secretary Basikop Makamu conceded the postponeme­nt was negatively affecting the party’s purse. “This is the money that could have been used to pay staff salaries,” he said.

“The party has no money. Although reasons for the postponeme­nts are genuine, it must be borne in mind that the more we keep postponing, the more money is lost.”

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