The Herald (South Africa)

R1bn a contingenc­y fund for when provincial disaster funds run out, Gungubele says

- Andisiwe Makinana

Minister in the presidency Mondli Gungubele has confirmed that provincial department­s have to use their own budgets in response to last month’s flood disaster in KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape.

The R1bn President Cyril Ramaphosa announced in declaring a national state of disaster was a contingenc­y fund to be accessed when provincial infrastruc­ture department­s’ budget allocation­s for disaster had run out.

The R1bn package was also announced by finance minister Enoch Godongwana, according to media reports.

“I know undoubtedl­y that the minister of finance has said there is [a] R1bn contingenc­y fund which is in the coffers of [the National] Treasury,” Gungubele said yesterday.

“This is a fact. This is not a theory or anything.

“But the minister would have said infrastruc­ture department­s, whenever there is a budget allocation to them, there is a portion for contingenc­y situations, for disaster.

“Once that is done and finished, they are expected therefore to access the R1bn.”

Gungubele was addressing a meeting of parliament’s ad hoc committee on flood disaster relief and recovery.

He said the provincial department­s were expected to provide phase 1 relief, which mainly involved provision of immediate humanitari­an relief.

This includes public communicat­ion and informatio­n disseminat­ion, search and rescue or recovery, burial assistance, death certificat­es, postmortem­s, health services, psychosoci­al support, temporary shelter, food, personal essentials and emergency water supply.

The KwaZulu-Natal government was assisting the national government in assessing the full costs of dealing with the effects of the disaster, Gungubele said.

“Already, no less than R25bn is a provisiona­l assessment.”

This would cover the government’s medium- and longterm response to the crisis.

“We don’t want to confuse these issues R1bn for immediate interventi­on is there once infrastruc­ture department­s have actually used what is traditiona­lly allocated to them, they have to access that,” he said.

The Sunday Times reported at the weekend that there was no R1bn “immediatel­y” available to KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape , as promised by Godongwana.

Instead, the two provinces were asked to reprioriti­se their budgets using money that would be refunded when the National Treasury approved their applicatio­ns to access disaster grants.

The newspaper reported that Godongwana’s comments last month, which were later repeated by Ramaphosa, created the impression that the Treasury would allocate additional funds to help the provinces recover from the flood damage.

 ?? Picture: SANDILE NDLOVU ?? FLOOD DISASTER: The latest heavy rains have caused more infrastruc­tural damage. This property in Umdloti, north of Durban, was destroyed
Picture: SANDILE NDLOVU FLOOD DISASTER: The latest heavy rains have caused more infrastruc­tural damage. This property in Umdloti, north of Durban, was destroyed

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