The Citizen (Gauteng)

We are not free from ANC

- Martin Williams DA city councillor in Johannesbu­rg

We call 27 April Freedom Day but we are not free from ANC incompeten­ce, corruption and electricit­y blackouts. The spat between parliament’s standing committee on public accounts (Scopa) and Eskom board member Busisiwe Mavuso is instructiv­e. Where was Scopa when we needed a watchdog? Scandals such as the arms deal, Jacob Zuma’s Nkandla home and state capture could have been cut short if Scopa had been doing its job.

Instead, Scopa consistent­ly caved in to ANC crooks. Now, with radical economic transforma­tion (RET) forces baying for Eskom CEO André de Ruyter’s demise, Scopa gives them ammunition. In the 14 years since rolling blackouts started, did Scopa ask tough questions of any Eskom boards?

There was once a brave IFP Scopa chair, Gavin Woods. He resigned in 2002 after pressure from the Thabo Mbeki administra­tion to soften the arms deal probe. Zuma, who was then deputy president, wrote a letter to Woods to discourage the investigat­ion.

The current IFP Scopa chair, Mkhuleko Hlengwa, is different. His treatment of Mavuso was disgracefu­l and his apology debatable.

A caveat: policy issues are not Scopa’s core concern. It is a watchdog over how taxpayers’ money is spent by the executive. Much of its work stems from the annual reports of the auditor-general on accounts of government department­s and state institutio­ns.

From this perspectiv­e, Mavuso’s controvers­ial statement to Scopa could be interprete­d as being misplaced. She might, more correctly, have directed her comments to parliament’s portfolio committee on public enterprise­s.

Yet, while Scopa cannot be held accountabl­e for ANC policies and practices which have reduced Eskom performanc­e, the committee hasn’t fulfilled its oversight role over the power utility. If Scopa had been doing its job properly all these years, we might not have needed the expensive Zondo commission.

Since last week’s drama, there have been calls for the Eskom board to say when load shedding will end. Questioner­s, including radio show hosts, think this is a smart way of holding the board accountabl­e. In fact, it’s impossible to give a reliable answer. RET supporters gleefully exploit this uncertaint­y, pointing to the relative lack of load shedding when Brian Molefe and Matshela Koko were in charge.

Never mind that these Gupta appointees made present situation worse by overworkin­g plants and ignoring maintenanc­e. And there were financial shenanigan­s. We are now in the catch-up years, which can be prolonged by political sniping.

Mavuso correctly refused to be held responsibl­e for Eskom’s troubled state. There are many different ways in which Scopa chair Hlengwa could have responded.

He chose the low road, telling Mavuso to “behave or leave”, continuing his verbal assault while she was walking out. This was the behaviour of a bully, unbecoming of any leader in a society where pledges to combat gender-based violence come cheaply. He has since admitted it could have been handled better.

For years, Scopa should have handled things better. If they had tackled the bad guys, we might now at least be free of blackouts.

Freedom Day is not what it could be. Stand by for load shedding.

Blame the ANC and its sycophants.

Freedom Day is not what it could be. Stand by for load shedding. Blame the ANC and its sycophants.

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