The Citizen (KZN)

Report on arts relief funds

MINISTER: HAS FINDINGS INTO IRREGULARI­TIES

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – Simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Some received more than they asked for while thousands got nothing.

Sports, Arts and Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa will finally break his silence on a forensic report into the alleged mismanagem­ent of R300 million meant for Covid relief grants for artists. The National Arts Council (NAC) has handed over the report to Mthethwa on an investigat­ion it commission­ed into how the relief money was irregularl­y distribute­d to various beneficiar­ies.

Some successful applicants of the funds apparently received more than they asked for and for multiple projects while thousands of artists continue to wait their turn.

The department’s spokespers­on Zimasa Velaphi said Mthethwa will be addressing this issue today during a planned media briefing.

According to the NAC, the report confirmed some of the allegation­s and said heads will roll. But questions over the independen­ce of this probe remain unanswered, according to the Democratic Alliance (DA).

Artists around the country held protests over the past year, demanding answers over the management of Covid relief funds and the Presidenti­al Employment Stimulus Programme (Pesp). The latter included the R300 million which was allocated to the NAC last year.

This month, the NAC announced that since its last engagement in August, the NAC has made progress with regard to the finalisati­on of Pesp and promised to have concluded all final payments by mid-October. It encouraged beneficiar­ies to submit all outstandin­g reports so their payments to be finalised.

Soon after the NAC opened applicatio­ns for the funds in October last year, allegation­s and complaints of mismanagem­ent and maladminis­tration of the Pesp began pouring in from members of the creative industry. These include some NAC panel members who were involved in the Pesp adjudicati­on process.

The forensic investigat­ion revealed several irregulari­ties pertaining to the management of the Pesp, including financial mismanagem­ent, process irregulari­ties and lack of adequate oversight regarding its implementa­tion.

“From the report’s findings, none of the recently appointed council members were found to have engaged in any wrongdoing,” the NAC statement reads.

“The NAC plans, without prejudice, to institute disciplina­ry hearings against those negatively implicated in the forensic report. Such processes will be done against a timeline with firm deliverabl­es set against each milestone. The political principals will also be provided with progress reports in this regard.”

Opposition parties have demanded transparen­cy in how government in dealing with the Pesp scandal, following months of relative silence

DA MP Tsepo Mhlongo sent a parliament­ary question on the investigat­ion into the Pesp to Mthethwa over two weeks ago and has expressed concern he is yet to be responded to. He wants to know how the firm which conducted the investigat­ion was appointed and the exact terms of reference of the report and whether they include accounting.

The Inkatha Freedom Party’s member of portfolio committee on sport, arts and culture Inkosi Bhekizizwe Luthuli said the party has noted the NAC’s recent announceme­nt on the report after it also complained about the long wait for answers.

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