The Citizen (KZN)

Hawks raid Limpopo municipali­ty

- Alex Japho Matlala

The Directorat­e of Priority Crimes (Hawks) raided the Ba-Phalaborwa local municipali­ty in Limpopo on Friday, amid allegation­s of tender corruption in different projects to the amount of R30 million.

Hawks spokespers­on Captain Matimba Maluleke said during the raid laptops and essential documents were seized.

The raid comes in the wake of allegation­s involving dodgy tenders – including the pool of consulting engineerin­g services providers for infrastruc­ture developmen­t projects and the pool for property plant and equipment – for the last three years.

Between 2018 and 2019, the beleaguere­d municipali­ty received a qualified audit opinion from the office of the auditor-general (AG). At the time, the AG flagged the institutio­n on irregulari­ties on the procuremen­t processes.

These included, among others, that some bid documentat­ion did not stipulate the minimum threshold for local production and content as required by the 2017 preferenti­al procuremen­t regulation, supply chain management (SCM) role players, whose partners had a private or business interest in contracts awarded by the municipali­ty, participat­ed in the process relating to that contract, reasonable steps were not taken to prevent irregular expenditur­e and the expenditur­e disclosed did not reflect the full extent of the irregular expenditur­e incurred.

The AG advised that the majority of disclosed irregular expenditur­e was caused by non-compliance of the SCM processes.

The municipali­ty further failed to investigat­e R99 659 596 of unauthoris­ed expenditur­e by willfully defying internal controls.

Yesterday, the Democratic Alliance (DA) complained that during the last decade, not one municipal official was found guilty of maladminis­tration or mismanagem­ent of funds at the institutio­n.

DA provincial leader Jacques Smalle said officials at the institutio­n have been acting with impunity, enriching themselves and their cronies at the expense of the Ba-Phalaborwa taxpayers.

“It can no longer be business as usual. The political executive of the municipali­ty must step up and hold officials to account for flouting the Municipal Finance Management Act,” said Smalle.

“Phalaborwa town could potentiall­y be an economic hub in the province. It is a gateway to the Kruger National Park, is surrounded by game farms, lodges and mining activities.

“It is the duty of the municipali­ty to spend their budget prudently on service delivery, not only to improve the lives of all residents, but to create a conducive environmen­t to stimulate investment.”

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