The Mercury

SA cabinet will be looking at strategy to deal with ‘constructi­on Mafia’ - Nxesi

- ROY COKAYNE roy.cokayne@inl.co.za

THE INTIMIDATI­ON of companies and workers on constructi­on sites has been raised at Cabinet level, which was looking at a strategy to deal with the issue, said Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi.

If not addressed, this culture would become entrenched and the government would not be able to do anything about it, he warned at a Constructi­on Industry Developmen­t Board (CIDB) National Stakeholde­r Forum meeting in Pretoria on Friday.

Business forums or the so-called “constructi­on Mafia” first started invading constructi­on sites in KwaZulu-Natal, with this practice spreading to other provinces.

Nxesi said that some of the people who had lost tenders in their bidding processes had started hiring people to stage protests at constructi­on sites, stressing that there was no place for criminalit­y related hijacking of constructi­on sites.

This issue was of grave concern to the government and the industry because it took “away bread from the tables of the very people who build the economy and our industry, the contractor­s” while also robbing taxpayers of desperatel­y needed social and economic developmen­t by inflating the cost of infrastruc­ture.

He added that two decades since the advent of democracy it was reasonable to expect that people would be impatient with the pace of developmen­t and transforma­tion.

It was these legitimate expectatio­ns that site invaders masquerade­d behind in conducting these unlawful actions of hijacking constructi­on sites in the name of the Preferenti­al Procuremen­t Policy Framework Act regulation­s and 30 percent subcontrac­ting provision on projects above R30 million.

“The CIDB is working with the National Treasury on providing guidelines related to the applicatio­n of the 30 percent subcontrac­ting provision,” he said.

Nxesi said late payments to contractor­s by clients and its detrimenta­l effect on emerging enterprise­s was among the many important issues the forum had lamented.

One of the solutions that the government must possibly explore to this by now perennial problem was “legislatio­n of payment guarantees”, the minister said.

 ?? KIM LUDBROOK African News Agency (ANA) ?? MTN’s head office in Johannesbu­rg. Ghana said the telecoms giant dropped calls, had poor sound quality and calls were not connected. |
KIM LUDBROOK African News Agency (ANA) MTN’s head office in Johannesbu­rg. Ghana said the telecoms giant dropped calls, had poor sound quality and calls were not connected. |

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