The Star Late Edition

Warning over political staffing

- BALDWIN NDABA baldwin.ndaba@inl.co.za

NEW ministers in government and MECs in provincial legislatur­es have been warned not to appoint political staff of their predecesso­rs after the May 8 national elections, to avoid bloating the state.

The Public Service Commission (PSC) yesterday also warned the government to appoint highly skilled and moral individual­s in senior positions to avoid state capture and corruption.

The commission released its report on the assessment of appointmen­ts of ministeria­l staff in the national and provincial government yesterday.

PSC commission­ers Mike Selloane, Moira Marais-Martin and Mpilo Sithole who authored the report, were unanimous in their view that it was unacceptab­le that South Africa should be run through commission­s of inquiry.

“It is unacceptab­le. We need highly skilled people with specialisa­tion in their fields who can fight corruption and graft. They must have management skills, monitoring evaluation and to oversee the moral integrity of the public service.

“Never again will our country be run by commission­s of inquiry,” Sithole vowed.

He said future commission­s should only be appointed to probe certain transgress­ions but not those which threatened state security and had forced President Cyril Ramaphosa to act on them.

“Besides the political will, there must be public service will to fight corruption,” Sithole said.

The PSC said it would be providing politician­s and public servants with a guide of how to manage the government and different institutio­ns. It also revealed that irregular appointmen­ts were common after every election especially at executive levels in government.

Marais-Martin said that new ministers and MECs had in the past appointed their predecesso­rs’ political staff “arbitraril­y and outside the legal framework”.

She said the report was aimed at encouragin­g executive authoritie­s to stick to the legal framework which obliges them to leave with their political staff after their term of office expires or terminated.

According to the Ministeria­l Handbook, premiers and ministers are allowed to have 10 private office staff members while deputy ministers and MECs have a staff complement of six.

“The study found that the appointmen­t of staff on special contracts is often not linked to the term of office of the relevant executive authority as prescribed in the regulation­s,” read the report.

Marais-Martin said MECs and ministers often found themselves with a bloated staff in their new offices which exceeded the department­al wage bill.

Never again, will our country be run by commission­s of inquiry

Mpilo Sithole

Public Service Commission commission­er

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Mpilo Sithole

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