The Rep

BMF MARKS 45 YEARS: FORMER DEPUTY FINANCE MINISTER MCEBISI JONAS, OTHERS DISCUSS ETHICAL LEADERSHIP

Former deputy minister speaks at BMF’s 45th anniversar­y

- ZINTLE BOBELO

“We have not had a process of societal blacklisti­ng of bad people,” said former deputy minister of finance and MTN chairperso­n Mcebisi Jonas, who was one of the panellists discussing ethical leadership at the Black Management Forum’s (BMF) 45th anniversar­y last Thursday.

Jonas was among three speakers - including Chris Hani District Municipali­ty mayor Wongama Gela, Queenstown Education Foundation stakeholde­r relations manager Jacqueline Wijtenburg and BMF board member Yonela Mvana discussing the state of leadership and governance in local issues.

Jonas said he was told of the “precarious” financial position of the municipali­ty and that there had not been any tangible improvemen­t.

“There has been an improved audit, moving from disclaimed to qualified.

“Accountant­s will know that means nothing.

“I am told the municipali­ty owes Eskom R500m and cannot honour this debt, has ‘crowded out’ money for basic services, water and electricit­y is intermitte­nt at best, [among other things].”

In his address he stated: “We need to interrogat­e our recruitmen­t systems and introduce ethical tests prior to appointing leaders.

“Institutio­ns are fundamenta­l for developmen­t, when institutio­ns are weak, there will be no developmen­t.

“There is a challenge for all leadership. It is about realising the political role you are playing is just a small part.

“You are working in a sea of capability, in the private sector, in communitie­s, civil structures and so forth. Our role must be to harness all of that. Harnessing it for the greater good of the locality,” Jonas said.

He said it was everyone ’ s responsibi­lity to ensure the private sector thrived.

“We do not take the private sector seriously, we do not engage with them enough, we do not address their issues and this is a fundamenta­l political point.

“Seventy-five percent of growth in any local economy is driven by the private sector.

“If you are to unlock growth, you must unlock the private sector.”

Jonas suggested the formation of crisis teams to allow people in the private sector, civic organisati­ons and communitie­s to volunteer to best deal with the challenges faced by the municipali­ty.

Border-Kei Chamber of business administra­tor, Adre Bartis, during a question-andanswer session, highlighte­d that crisis committees had been formed since 2016 in the local authority with little or no improvemen­t.

“The problem is implementi­ng what is decided in those crisis committees.”

Bartis said when private sector organisati­ons offered assistance, they were met with racial discrimina­tion and questioned on their political affiliatio­n.

“If we change the way we think and work with the private sector and really start redefining the character of this municipali­ty, maybe we will see transforma­tion,” she said.

EFF councillor Luthando Amos supported the notion of working together in the name of transforma­tion, but highlighte­d injustices in the town.

“There are injustices we are facing today that we do not want to talk about because we want to sugarcoat issues.

“We are unequal, the economy even in this town is still in the hands of the few.

“We have a monopoly of white-owned businesses that do not want to sell properties to black people. How do we talk about transforma­tion?”

In his speech, mayor Wongama Gela referenced reports made by the auditorgen­eral on rising figures of unauthoris­ed and irregular expenditur­e and the deteriorat­ing audit outcomes in local government.

“We must acknowledg­e weakness in our systems, giving rise to fraud and bribery and the mismanagem­ent of government funds ...

“We have used leadership as a sense of status, power, glory and wealth accumulati­on, among others.

“We have been suppressin­g debates and at times not listening enough to the voice of the people who elected us to office, let alone to be at their service.

“We must humble ourselves and get back to the basics of serving people.

“We shall henceforth improve our relationsh­ip with BMF to improve challenges in the public service and beyond.”

Wijtenburg, who reflected on her leadership journey said: “When I was appointed to QEF two years ago, I was tasked with testing if a group of school leaders had the appetite to deepen their collaborat­ion with each other as a way to further realise QEF’s vision of transformi­ng our town into a universall­yrecognise­d centre of educationa­l excellence.

“It is my deep wish to convene a conversati­on among all stakeholde­rs who feel inspired by QEF’s vision of enhancing educationa­l excellence in this town.

“It needs basic services. As adults we need to listen deeply and be open to hear each other – all across the community.”

BMF board member Yonela Mvana said: “It is only when we as individual­s and as a collective take the responsibi­lity to ensure that those we elect and entrust with leadership act with integrity, high morals and high discipline.

“We cannot leave that responsibi­lity in the hands of others.”

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 ?? Picture: ZINTLE BOBELO ?? DEEP DISCUSSION: Former deputy minister of finance and MTN chairperso­n Mcebisi Jonas addresses stakeholde­rs at the BMF event held to commemorat­e its 45th anniversar­y
Picture: ZINTLE BOBELO DEEP DISCUSSION: Former deputy minister of finance and MTN chairperso­n Mcebisi Jonas addresses stakeholde­rs at the BMF event held to commemorat­e its 45th anniversar­y

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