The Witness

SUSPENDED LOTTERIES MANAGER’S INTERDICT TO BLOCK DISCIPLINA­RY PROCEEDING­S FAILS

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Gugulethu Yako, the suspended legal manager at the NLC who is facing charges of taking money from a grant beneficiar­y, has failed in an urgent court bid to stop disciplina­ry proceeding­s against her.

Johannesbu­rg acting high court judge Johan Moorcroft this week dismissed the applicatio­n and ordered Yako to pay punitive costs, noting that: “It is impossible to avoid the inference that this applicatio­n is a tactic to delay, rather than finalise the disciplina­ry proceeding­s in good time.”

Yako sought orders setting aside a decision to suspend her and institute disciplina­ry proceeding­s ahead of a review applicatio­n in which she seeks to overturn the findings of the Special Investigat­ion Unit (SIU) against her.

Yako was suspended by the head of the NLC Jodi Scholtz in October 2023.

She was charged in December and informed in January that advocate Mandla Mkhatshwa had been appointed to preside over the disciplina­ry hearing.

Judge Moorcroft said the urgent applicatio­n had been brought some six months after her suspension and “no explanatio­n is provided for this delay”.

Yako also challenged the appointmen­t of advocate Mkhatshwa, which the judge said had no merit. He had been appointed in compliance with the NLC supply chain management process and met the requiremen­ts.

Yako also complained that she had been suspended by Scholtz and not by the board.

But the chairperso­n of the board confirmed that it had approved this action.

“She has been on full pay and benefits since October 2023. Serious charges have been brought against her, namely that she benefited financiall­y from a grant beneficiar­y of the NLC.

“This is strictly prohibited,” judge Moorcroft said.

“She admits that various amounts were paid into her bank account but says these were payments made by a suitor who, at the time, wanted to impress upon her that he was in a financial position to care for her.

“They subsequent­ly did enter into a relationsh­ip,” he said.

When the disciplina­ry hearing convened in February, Yoko had objected to its continuati­on because she was in the process of filing the review applicatio­n to set aside the report of the SIU which formed the basis of her suspension.

Judge Moorcraft dismissed the applicatio­n with an order for punitive costs.

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