The Star Early Edition

‘Tainted’ nominee list for CSA top spots

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THE list of nominees to stand for positions on Cricket South Africa’s Board of Directors includes an official who’s been accused of an assault that left one woman with a broken arm.

Border Cricket president Simphiwe Ndzundzu is facing an investigat­ion for alleged assault in East London after breaking into the home of another Border official, Sinethemba Mjekula in July and beating him, his sister and Mjekula’s disabled mother.

Mjekula, who played 49 first class matches for Eastern Province, KwaZulu-Natal Inland and the Warriors and currently serves on Cricket SA’s reserve umpires panel, confirmed that a case had been opened at Zwelitsha police station. The attack is understood to have resulted from a dispute about a piece of land.

Mjejula claimed that Ndzundzu, wielding a knobkerrie, attacked him and choked him, and then broke his sister’s arm with the weapon.

The investigat­ion into the assault has been put on the back burner because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Ndzundzu took over as Border Cricket’s president in August last year replacing Tando Gana and his name appearing on the list of nominees is sure to cause shockwaves, especially coming in women’s month, in which Cricket SA have been “celebratin­g the progress of women empowermen­t and gender equality both on and off the field, under the theme: ‘Enabling equality for women in the world of Cricket South Africa’.”

The theme received endorsemen­t from Cricket SA’s new independen­t director Eugenia Kula-Ameya, who is the only nominee for the Lead Director position on the Board.

Ndzundzu is among six people nominated to serve on the Cricket SA’s Board as non-independen­t directors. The Board comprises seven non-independen­t directors with three of the current members – Beresford Williams, Donovan

May, and Tebogo Siko running for the position of president of the organisati­on along with Ben Dladla, the president of the KwaZulu Natal Cricket Union. The positions will be voted for at CSA’s Annual General Meeting on September 5.

The aforementi­oned trio; Williams, Siko and May all served on CSA’s Board in the last year, when the organisati­on endured a catastroph­ic administra­tive meltdown. Williams is currently CSA’s acting president, taking up that position following the shock resignatio­n of Chris Nenzani last week.

Among the other nomination­s for a non-independen­t director spot is Xolani Vonya, who was chairman of Easterns Cricket Union, but was suspended in May after being accused by the Easterns CU Board of misconduct. In July, the ECU also suspended its CEO Mpho Seopa, a close confidant of Vonya and CSA’s suspended chief executive Thabang Moroe. Among the charges made by the ECU Board against Seopa are insubordin­ation, overspendi­ng and not getting board approval for entertainm­ent expenses.

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