The Star Early Edition

Jailed king gets R1.1m

Zuma never stopped salary

- LOUISE FLANAGAN

JAILED AbaThembu king Buyelekhay­a Dalindyebo is still being paid his R1.1 million salary because the president hasn’t removed his kingship.

Dalindyebo finally went to jail just before midnight on December 30 to start his 12-year sentence for assault, arson, kidnapping and defeating the ends of justice. But last week, he got his regular monthly salary from the government as the incumbent king.

“He is still being paid,” said Mamnkeli Ngam, the spokesman for the Eastern Cape Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs.

The provincial department is responsibl­e for paying the king, and salary payments are made on the 15th of each month, said Ngam. The remunerati­on of traditiona­l leaders is set nationally and a king is paid R1 137 922 a year, or R94 826 a month.

Dalindyebo is still being paid because President Jacob Zuma has not signed off on the AbaThembu’s 2012 request to remove the certificat­e of kingship from Dalindyebo because of his criminal conviction and other complaints about his behaviour.

When asked if there were plans to stop paying Dalindyebo, Ngam said: “The recognitio­n and de-recognitio­n of kings is the competency of the Office of the Presidency.”

Asked if the government was still paying any other routine costs for Dalindyebo’s household, Ngam again referred to the Presidency’s authority on recognitio­n of kings.

The Presidency has not responded to requests for comment since Tuesday. Zuma is in Davos for the World Economic Forum meeting. And Dalindyebo has spent most of his time in custody in hospital. Yesterday, Department of Correction­al Services spokesman Manelisi Wolela said Dalindyebo was in a private hospital in East London. Dalindyebo had not applied for medical parole, said Wolela.

Despite the battle for the AbaThembu kingship, and claims that this was handed over to Dalindyebo’s son while he’s in jail, Ngam said there were no plans to pay anyone else the salary.

“In terms of the department­al system, the salary is currently paid to the king,” he said.

In 2012, the AbaThembu tribe asked the minister of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs and the president to withdraw the certificat­e of kingship from Dalindyebo, which is the legal procedure.

The Traditiona­l Leadership and Governance Framework Act allows for the removal of a king who is sentenced to more than a year in prison without the option of a fine. It took two decades to bring Dalindyebo to justice.

The incidents took place in 1995 and 1996, and the prosecutio­n was endlessly delayed until he was convicted and sentenced to 15 years in the Mthatha High Court in 2009. He claimed to have appealed but no papers were filed for years.

The National Prosecutin­g Authority claimed to be appealing, but no papers were filed and the authoritie­s did nothing to implement the sentence.

High court records disappeare­d and were eventually reconstitu­ted, while the Department of Justice said any appeal was out of time. The lost lost his bid to appeal to the Constituti­onal Court last year.

 ?? PICTURE:: AP ?? DISGRACED: AbaThembu King Buyelekhay­a Dalindyebo
PICTURE:: AP DISGRACED: AbaThembu King Buyelekhay­a Dalindyebo

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