Pay back the R2m, court tells two municipal officials
Two Maluti-a-Phofung municipality officials were ordered by the Free State High Court this week to pay back R2 million they earned from illegal salary increments, implemented while the council was under administration.
The court found that the council ignored the authority of then administrator Amos Goliath, whom they bypassed, and appointed municipal manager Futhuli Mothamaha and chief financial officer Jemina Mazinyo, and inflated their salaries while the municipality was still under administration in 2020.
Mothamaha and Mazinyo’s salaries were increased by an annual R440 000 and R563 000 respectively, within their first month of service. Their salaries totalled R1.9 million and R1.5 million per year respectively, deemed excessive for officials at a run-down category 4 municipality that was under administration.
The provincial department of cooperative governance approached the court to have the excessive increments declared unlawful and set aside. In her judgment, Judge Mareena Opperman said having been placed under administration and in accordance with the Municipal Finance Act, the council’s powers were subsequently restricted.
The officials’ undermining of Goliath saw him being ejected from office and denied access to the premises by private security personnel.
“The alleged second and third respondents’ malfeasance is of a continuous nature. They persist in drawing the alleged unlawful salaries.
“The contracts were expeditiously finalised. The respondents and the council entered into contracts without the administrator’s knowledge and approval,” reads the judgment.
The salaries and the employment contracts were illegal as they did not comply with the law, said Opperman.
“The second and third respondents must reimburse the overpayments. The illegal conduct of the respondents must be dealt with in terms of the relevant law, legislation and remedies by the applicant [the provincial department of cooperative governance].”
When contacted for comment, Mothamaha would not talk about the damning court outcome. “I am appealing. I met with my lawyers [on Wednesday] and gave them instructions to appeal that judgement,” he said.
Mazinyo referred all questions to her lawyers.
The duo were ordered to pay back the public funds within 90 days.
Democratic Alliance caucus chair Alison Oates said the council could order new contracts for Mothamaha and Mazinyo.
“The appointments took place on 26 March, 2020 when the municipality was under administration. The court clearly stated that this was an act of anarchy. We wrote to the speaker and pointed out that the actions were illegal.
“The issue was raised on many occasions in the legislature and at a provincial public accounts committee meeting in Maluti-a-Phofung. Our efforts paid off and we are vindicated,” she said.
The province handed back the management of Maluti-a-Phofung to the council last year. The municipality owes Eskom R6 billion. Defaults on payments, inability to collect revenue and nonexistent service delivery earned the municipality the tag of being one of the worst councils in SA.
Fed-up residents of Qwaqwa took to the streets last year demanding water after taps ran dry for months on end.
The ANC was dealt a blow when it lost power at the municipality to a coalition consisting of its former councillors, referred to as the MAP16 after the 2021 local polls. The group was expelled from the party for condemning rampant corruption in the municipality.