The Mercury

Parties unpack KZN’s hot button issues

- KUBEN CHETTY kuben.chetty@inl.co.za

PREMIER candidates and senior members of political parties in KwaZulu-Natal spoke yesterday at the IOL Elections panel discussion, on a range of issues including unemployme­nt, the state of infrastruc­ture in the eThekwini Municipali­ty and what was needed to fix challenges in the province.

The panel was made up of Thami Ntuli (IFP), Chris Pappas (DA), Magasela Mzobe (EFF), Zwakele Mncwango (ActionSA), Nonkululek­o Hlongwane-Mhlongo (RISE Mzansi), Munzoor Shaik Emam (Allied Movement for Change) Mafika Mndebele (ANC), Sagren Moodley (Independen­t Candidate) and Seelan Archery (African Movement Congress).

On their party’s plans to stimulate the economy and create sustainabl­e job opportunit­ies, the DA’s premier candidate, Pappas, said stability in infrastruc­ture, energy, water, rail and other facilities was needed.

“We need a government that says something and actually does it, so when the government says they are going to fix the infrastruc­ture, they actually fix it.

“What we do not have at the moment is that commitment to create stability.”

The IFP’s Ntuli said the party would address the issue of instabilit­y in the province to ensure investors were attracted and business flourished.

“We will ensure that people on the ground participat­e in the developmen­t of their local economies by ensuring that we support them, and we emphasise this support in the small and medium enterprise sector.”

The ANC’s Mndebele said the reality was that the world was facing economic pressure.

He said investment in small and medium enterprise­s was crucial to offset this economic pressure.

“We need to turn KZN into an industrial town, the more clinics, schools and hospitals we build, the more conducive the environmen­t becomes to attract business.

“The next focus should be on TVET colleges so that young people emerge with the skills that are responsive to job creation,” Mndebele said.

The EFF’s Mzobe said it was important to hire the unemployed doctors and teachers in the province.

“You cannot encourage the youth to go to school and you have unemployed doctors, and yet clinics are facing a situation where they need doctors.

“No investors are going to come into a country where there is no decisive leadership on policy positions.”

Shaik Emam said eThekwini was one of the worst performing municipali­ties in the country.

“The emphasis in KZN is not on fixing water infrastruc­ture because the emphasis is on water tankers, because that is where there is money to be made,” he said.

He said the party would ensure that police officers were paid better, as this was a solution to crime and corruption.

“Let us pay them better and let us put policing as a subject on the school curriculum so that we identify those who have a passion for policing and bring them in.”

Archery said African Movement Congress was a civil society movement that is now a party contesting the elections.

“We stepped up in order to fill the breach that was created by politician­s and political parties that have run our country for more than 30 years.

“It requires all of us to fix this country, our diversity should be our strength in this province if not in this country.”

 ?? | DOCTOR ?? IOL held an Elections panel discussion with political party leaders and an independen­t candidate in uMhlanga yesterday. NGCOBO Independen­t Newspapers
| DOCTOR IOL held an Elections panel discussion with political party leaders and an independen­t candidate in uMhlanga yesterday. NGCOBO Independen­t Newspapers

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