PARLIAMENTARY NOTES.
The
South African Parliament can boast with at least 29 self-admitted thieves
as MP's, but many more - some claims estimate the number at 300 - may be
uncovered as parliament is preparing to release a closely guarded
forensic report that implicates hundreds of MPs in the so-called Travelgate
scam — and shows that some cheated on their partners as well as on
taxpayers.
The report — by PricewaterhouseCoopers
and said to be the size of a telephone directory — names about 330 past
and present legislators initially implicated in the scam, but insiders
say around 100 were knowing participants in the fraud now said to have
cost Parliament as much as R30-million.
Parliamentary sources familiar
with the report said its release would show some MPs had taken holidays
and private trips with people other than their spouses. The theft mostly
occurred when MP's traded the coupons for free airline tickets for cash
from certain travel agents.
Close to R10-million has been recovered
from MPs and travel agents who systematically cheated Parliament for up
to four years.
About R2.5-million has been repaid
by the 29 MPs who have been charged or who have completed plea-bargain
arrangements with the state. The rest has come from travel agents and others,
including Cabinet ministers and senior officials who were allowed to make
repayment deals without facing prosecution.
In October 2006 16 MPs (and former
MP's) sealed deals with prosecutors, accepting convictions for theft or
fraud of between R45 000 and R28 9000 and agreeing to pay fines generally
between a quarter and a half of the amount they stole. The first five ANC
MPs who admitted guilt in 2005 — Ruth Bhengu and Pamela Mnandi, Mildred
Mpaka, Rhoda Joemat and Mavis Magazi — were fined amounts generally higher
than the cost to the state of their crimes and were forced to resign their
seats.
All also have to repay the money
they took, though some have been given until 2010 to do so.
Former Democratic Alliance MP Antoinette
Versfeld was among those who concluded plea bargains. Craig Morkel, a former
DA member who jumped ship and formed his own party, the Progressive
Independent Movement, is still fighting to clear his name and Charles
Redcliffe, a former MP for both the DA and the New National Party, paid
a R70 000 fine earlier in 2006.
Amongst those not yet charged is
ANC Chief Whip, Mbulelo
Goniwe, who claims that those who admitted to theft are not really
guilty "because they believe they are not guilty of any offence,"
despite having signed admission of guilt fines.
A full list of the self-admitted
thieves in parliament can be seen
here.
If you have never heard
of ANC Member of Parliament Storey Morutoa, don't worry - you are not alone.
She does not often speak in Parliament, but when she does, fellow MP's
pay attention - at least those who have not been "extinghuished".
In June 2006 she begun
her annual speech like this: “... Hon Deputy President, Hon Ministers
and Deputy Ministers, Hon Members of Parliament, and all extinguished guests
present in national gallery.”
“The true greatness of a person is measured by the impact that person has on the lives of others. This statement rings true for (guess who?) who has touched the lives of many in different ways.Any guess who it can be? No, it is not Mother Theresa. To find the answer to this wonderful person, click here to access her own unbelievable curriculum vitae as she sees herself.
“Such is the essence of true greatness.
“A greatness that comes from understanding the complexities of the human condition; a greatness that rests in the humility of touching a human being from the moment of birth to the final departing breath and a greatness that consistently strives to make quality of life possible for every one of her people.
“Such is the profound devotion that she has shown in her efforts to improve the lives of people.”
South
Africa's Deputy State President, Phumzile Mlambo-Nguka, took her husband
and two children, her friend Thuthukile Mazibuko-Skweyiya, and the two
children of her personal assistant, on a private holiday to the United
Arab Emirates (UAE) from December 27th to 31st 2005. The entire entourage
visited the UAE as non-paying guests of the UAE heads of state. Mazibuko-Skweyiya
is the wife of dr Zola Zklweyiha, minister of social development, who has
personal interests in the oil industry.
Mlambo-Nguka commandeered
a Falcon 900 executive jet of the SA Air Force's VIP fleet for the flight
there and back. The facts are as follows: she and her multi-millionaire
businessman husband, Bulelani, and their children, her friend, and her
personal assistant's children flew on an official jet at government (read:
taxpayers’) expense to the United Arab Emirates, where they enjoyed a holiday
over the Christmas period.
After her expensive (R400
000 or so, just for fuel - excluding the cost of accommodation for the
entourage of pilot, cabin crew and security guards) indulgence was brought
to light, she said nothing for three days. Then she told the SABC that
there had been a business dimension to her trip, more specifically that
she had been looking at crane building, which tied in with her project
to improve South Africa’s growth rate to 6% a year. It is unknown to what
extent Mlambo-Nguka is an expert in construction cranes.
Then came a statement
from her adviser, Khanyo Gqulu, in which he stated: “Contrary to yesterday’s
and today’s reports, she did not travel to UAE on a fact-finding mission,
nor did she go there on half-business half-holiday and she did not go there
to study crane-building businesses.” Soon after, a third explanation was
put forward: Murphy Morobe, PRO of the presidency, explained that Mlambo-Nguka
was "oficially on holiday", but that she "unoficially" visited building
projects and a development exhibition with the assistance of the South
African ambassador.
She authorised the flight
with the Falcon 900 herself, claiming the R700 000 or so total expenses
against the presidential budget.
Ms Adrienne Carlisle,
communications head of the PSAM (Public Service Accountability Monitor)
of the Rhodes University stated that the visit to UAR cannot be justified
under the present rules and that Mlambo-Nguka will have to reimburse the
state for the total expenses thereof.
Less than a month after
the controversial flight to the UAR, Mlambo-Nguka was again in the news
when she commandeered a Gulfstream V international jet for a flight
of 13 minutes to Sun City, at a cost of R75 000, to attend the opening
of the Women's World Cup golf tournament. A smaller Cessna Citation jet
or a King Air turbine prop airplane could have done the flight for less
than half the cost, with a flying time of a few minutes more.
See also Flying
presidential style.
THE
VIEW FROM HIGH ABOVE
-Sunday Times,
2005-08-14
|
TAKING
ZIMBABWE AS EXAMPLE
|
ON
SHAIKY GROUNDS
|
TRAVELGATE
Five ANC Members of Parliament
were convicted of fraud in the Cape Town Regional Court in March 2005.
The MPs pleaded guilty to fraud
and were the first of 23 MPs implicated in a multi-million rand travel
voucher scandal to be criminally convicted.
|
LOW
QUALIFICATIONS
-
Sunday Times 2005-05-29
|
THEY
HIGH FLYING DEPUTY PREZ
- The World,
2005-04-17
|
![]() Public Works Minister
Stella Sigcau was late for her speech to Parliament on the state of the
nation in Febrary 2005 and the whips had to demote her down the list of
speakers to accommodate her. When she eventually took to the podium at
4pm, she still believed it was morning and said so several times. For example:
“In responding to your speech Mr President, we must this morning
realise that ...”
- Sunday
Times, 2005-02-19
|
![]() One of the reasons for
an increase in the number of vehicles being hijacked in and around Cape
Town is residents are buying more cars, and so the hijackers have more
to choose from, according to Safety and Security Minister Charles Nqakula.
|
BLACK
MEN CAN'T COUNT (even in they are economists)
President Thabo Mbeki
may have a degree in economics, but his ability to count is questionable.
- Sunday
Times, 2004-12-05
|
RACISM
"EXPOSED"
- Sunday
Times, 2004-10-24
|
RED
CAPITALIST
![]() The numbers are in and the annual contest for the department with the mostest food, drink and battered prawns at its parliamentary party has been completed. The five leading parties of 'cocktail week' cost a cool R401 065 between them. There are a total of 27 government departments so you can imagine the sorts of extrapolations a Stats SA professional could arrive at with a pocket calculator. Coming in only at number five is President Thabo Mbeki's cocktail party, which came in cheaply at a mere R52 000 for food and drink. As an official statement said: "The expenditure to host the Presidency Cocktail was not intended to improve service delivery." The winners of the parliamentary party stakes is none other than the Minister for Public Enterprises, Alec Erwin (a prominent member of the Communist Party of South Africa) hosting both a lunch-hour reception at Parliament and a separate jol at popular music venue Marco's Place at a combined cost of R141 025.42, of which R93 000 went to the food and drinks category. Which proves that when it comes to spending big, the Communists are hard to beat. In second place was the Department of Education which spent R140 896.61 on its party -- R39 839 on printed materials, R27 000 on catering, R2 400 for a UCT string quartet and R63 657.61 on "post event advertisements". Said the responsible Minister Naledi Pandor (new in her job): "We maximised the opportunity to report to the nation." - Sunday
Times 2004-07-18
|
"If
my sister should come to me and tell me that she is in love with that man,
I will give her a whipping."
These were the words
of Pres Thabo Mbeki during a pre-election ANC rally in Rustenburg, Mpumalanga,
in March 2004 when he pointed to a poster bearing the image of opposition
ACDP-leader Rev. Kenneth Meshoe.
At first Smuts Ngonyama,
ANC communications head, vehemently denied that Mbeki had uttered the threat,
saying "the president does not even have a sister." Mbeki was speaking
in the Sotho language at the time.
However, after repeated
newspapers reports by various independent journalists well versed in Sotho
and strong protests by various organisations opposing the abuse of women,
Ngonyama backtracked and explained that "the president was merely joking
- it was his way of informing the voters aabout the correct political choices.
He could easily well have referred to his brother in stead of his sister;
let us not make it a gender issue....."
Dr Mangosutoho Buthelezi,
former Minister of Home Affairs and leader of the Inkatha Freedom Party,
likes to perform to his people in Kwazulu-Natal in traditional dress. However,
both he and his colleagues at these occasions are always all draped in
the skin and body parts of a Cites-listed endangered wildlife species.
Which explains why he has not been appointed Minister of Nature Conservation
and Environmental Affairs.....
(Buthelezi was left out
of the cabinet after the general election of April, 2004.
Polygamist
deputy president Jacob Zuma is a man of many wives.
That perhaps explains his high cost of living: during 1999 he overspent
an amount of R37 000 per month, and during 2000 an amount of R29 000
per month over his parliamentary salary.
These facts came out
in the charge sheet against
Shabir
Shaikh, Zuma's financial adviser, who was summonsed during August 2003
and charged with with corruption, fraud, theft and money laundering during
the armaments purchases.
DEPUTY President Jacob
Zuma lived large but paid his bills very, very slowly — if at all.
South Africa’s second
citizen had such a fundamentally flawed sense of personal financial discipline
that a massive 140 of his signed cheques — with a collective value of more
than R447 766.67 — bounced.
That happened over seven
years, from 1996 to 2003. The reason: he did not have the money in the
bank — or available through his overdraft — to support his spending habits.
But Zuma’s financial
chaos did not end there.
Standard Bank took back
the MasterCard it had granted, because his debt escalated to R120 000 by
June 1997.
In May 1999, Permanent
Bank issued judgment against the man who is set to become South Africa’s
next president after the end of Thabo Mbeki’s term, because he missed 20
bond repayments on his Durban flat.
These and other details
of how Zuma conducted his financial affairs will be presented in the Durban
High Court as part of the evidence of forensic auditors KPMG during October
2004.
The report, presented
by auditor and self-confessed “bloodhound” Johan van der Walt, was admitted
as part of the court record.
In November 2003, KPMG
was asked by the National Directorate of Public Prosecutions to compile
the report — which stretches to 259 pages and a dozen files of supporting
documentation and addendums — to assist with the prosecution of Zuma’s
former financial adviser Shabir Shaik on corruption charges.
Even Shaik’s appointment
as Zuma’s financial adviser in 1995 did not help lessen the then KwaZulu-Natal
Economic Affairs MEC’s financial woes, although his relationship with Shaik
did see him benefit by more than R1.2-million.
According to the state’s
evidence, Shaik used money from his Nkobi Group — money which came mainly
from overdraft facilities given to various Nkobi companies — to bankroll
Zuma’s extravagant lifestyle.
Shaik picked up the tab
for everything from rent to bond payments, to school fees, to car payments,
to telephone bills, to repairs on Zuma’s luxury vehicles.
He
even bought Armani and Gucci and suits from his friend Prakash Soni’s exclusive
Casanova boutique, after commenting to his then personal assistant, Bianca
Singh, that Msholozi (Zuma’s clan name) wore “cheap suits”.
According to the state,
no amount was too large or too small for the cash-strapped deputy president.
Zuma was not above collecting
an envelope from Singh containing a mere R700 — R200 from Shaik’s wallet
and R500 from the Nkobi petty-cash tin — at the air force base in Durban
in late 2000. The envelope was delivered to Zuma by Singh on Shaik’s instruction,
at a time when Zuma’s accounts were so heavily overdrawn that any deposit
would have been immediately swallowed by the bank.
At the other end of the
scale, in 1999 Shaik’s Kobitech stumped up R50 000 to pay the arrears on
Zuma’s Mercedes- Benz E320, which he had bought for R350 000 in 1997. In
2002 Kobitech (for which, read Shaik) was again Zuma’s rescuer, this time
coughing up some R47 000 towards his Mitsubishi Pajero, which he had bought
in May 2001 for R275 000.
Annual payments to Zuma
from Shaik and Nkobi companies began with a modest R3 500 in 1995, peaking
at R256 423 in 1997. By 2002, Shaik and Nkobi’s largesse towards Zuma had
totalled R1 269 836.40.
According to the KPMG
report, the payments did not stop in 2002, the cut-off date for its investigative
mandate.
Absa Private Bank initially
declined Shaik’s application in April 2001 as he had a “high risk rating”
and had exceeded his overdraft limit 15 times in 12 months. However, Absa
took a “strategic decision” to accept his application “because Shaik was
the financial advisor of Zuma”.
This was not to last.
Three months later, Absa again declared him a high risk with “no tangible
security” and moved his account to an ordinary business centre.
Polygamist deputy-president
Jacob Zuma, in an attempt to convince the world of his innocence in the
defence
contract scandal, found himself in Madrid at the end of September 2003.
He took time out from his not too very busy schedule to watch a Real Madrid
training session.
His minders said he would
take questions only on football.
Zuma requested that the
training session be interrupted so that he could shake hands with the players.
The response was something along the lines of "Jacob WHO?" and the deputy
president had to contend himself with staring admirably from the sidelines.
The training session went on uninterrupted.
The
company Deloitte Consulting has developed a delightful software program
that is able to assess the amount of jargon in the text of a speech. Appropriately
named "Bullfighter", it also identifies confusing and indecipherable language
and the general level of obfuscation.
The diagnosis on President Thabo Mbeki's last six major speeches?
"Teetering on the edge of unclear. The overall meaning remains discernible, but it becomes possible to lose oneself in corollary thoughts, which may be worth exploration, but which can also detract from the core point of the written article."
Frequently used "bull terms": "empower" (27 times), "transformation" (12), "enterprise" (9), "global" (8) and "paradigm" (1). The average word count per speech is 3 500 and sentence length 26.5 words. And the speech with the most, uh, bull? The Youth Day rally one on June 16, 2003.
The
computer program was a lot nicer about Democratic Alliance leader Tony
Leon: "Mostly clear, with some unnecessarily long words and sentences.
You get to the point, although with an occasional detour. Most educated
readers will navigate the text with no difficulty. Longer words and sentences
appear occasionally."
And
Tony Leon's bull terms: "empower" (2), "reach out" (2), "leverage" (1)
and "global" (1).
For
all those who have been confused by the government's position on Zimbabwe,
South Africa's cherubic Defence Minister, Mosiuoa Lekota, has finally cleared
things up. Commenting on Zimbabwe opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai's
detention, forget-me-not Lekota said: "Why do you leave the talks when
the people agree let's go and talk? "
"He must go with his own position to the talks, and then Zanu must come with their own position. But when he left that, we felt he weakened our position. We really felt he weakened our position, but we will continue, even now, we continue to say to Mugabe, they've got to go to the talks."
Even Deloitte Touche's "Bullfighter" programme gave up when asked to analyse this statement.
A
total of 24 new BMW automobiles, at a total cost of R25 million, were purchased
during the past three years by the police for the presidencial cavalcade
(consisting of Pres Thabo Mbeki and Deputy President Zuma). It includes
four armoured series-7 BMW's - the same vehicle used by the well known
Victoria Beckham, also known as Posh Spice.
According to experts
the armour includes bullet-resistant bodies and windows, as well as reinforcing
the vehicles to be landmine proof. These modifications can only be done
in BMW's special factory in Germany. The purchases includes 12 series-5
BMW's in 2002-'03, 2 BMW X5-four drive vehicles in 2002-'03, 4 5-series
BMW's in 2003-'04 and 2 BMW X5-four drive vehicles in 2003-'04. The total
cost amounts to R24 909 675, enough to build 1720 low cost houses for the
homeless.
The vehicles are used
as official cars for the president and deputy president, with half of them
stationed in Cape Town, the other half in Gauteng.
In an article in the
magazine BMW News, the company reports on the presidential choice under
the heading "BMW - the car the president prefers."
Also see Flying
Presidential Style and Flying Deputy-presidential
style.
Opposition
parties have condemned an incident on an international Lufthansa flight
during which Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang (left) became
abusive and swore at a fellow passenger. The incident occurred on a late
night flight from Frankfurt to Cape Town April 28th, 2003, when passenger
Jentz von Wichtingen (right) refused to sit next to her "because she is
responsible for the deaths of thousands of South Africans as a result of
her HIV/Aids policies". The bare-footed Tshabalala-Msimang told fellow
passenger Jentz von Wichtingen, to "fuck off" and threatened to hit the
Cape-Town based German on from South Africa to Germany on Monday
night.
Shortly before her overseas
visit, she had addressed a mining summit at Midrand and had again, publicly
rejected the use of anti-retrovirals to treat Aids patients.
A shocked Von Wichtingen,
who has lived and worked in Sea Point for ten years, said on Monday he
was totally stunned when the country's health minister told him loudly,
and twice to "fuck off" in front of a number of passengers and crew.
She also stabbed her
finger against his upper arm repeatedly, threatened him, told him she would
hit him and said he "should have stayed in Germany."
In a statement
Democratic Alliance health spokesperson Sandy Kalyan said the time had
long since gone for President Thabo Mbeki to fire Tshabalala-Msimang. "Surely
among the ANC's almost 300 members of parliament there must be someone
who would be less of an embarrassment to South Africa, someone who could
do a better job.
"We are still waiting
for Minister Tshabalala-Msimang to apologise for raising groundless fears
about the safety and effectiveness of Nevirapine. She should add to this,
by apologising to the passengers who witnessed her reported behaviour on
this flight."
Kalyan said she should
also apologise to the South African public for conduct unbecoming a member
of cabinet.
Tshabala-Msimang's spokesperson
Sibani Mngadi, who was with her on the flight, was not available for comment.
However, his colleague Jo-Anne Collinge confirmed that she is aware "an
incident" had occurred on the flight, but had not yet had an opportunity
to speak to the minister. The Minister's office subsequently refused to
comment on the incident, although Essop Pahad, minister in the president's
office, chastised the South African press and white South Africans
for not showing "enough respect for black ministers". Pres Mbeki announced
that it had no intention of taking any steps against Tshabalala-Msimang.
Manto Tshabala-Msimang, Minister of Health appears to have moved to New York, understandably considering her total lack of popularity in South Africa. Why else would she have told Democratic Alliance MP Mike Waters, in response to a question in the National Assembly during September 2003: "I have flown in all the way from New York to answer your question and yet you are not listening to me."
Zanele
Mbeki, wife of state president Thabo Mbeki, purchased a house in Summerstrand,
Port Elizabeth, from the Department of Public Works in November 2001 for
the amount of R440 000, without the Department asking for tenders. Ms Mbeki
used her maiden name, Dlamini, for the transaction in an obvious move to
hide her true identity. In July 2002 she put the same house up for sale,
asking R875 000.
Mbeki's father, Govan
Mebki, previously rented the house from the Department of Public Affairs
before his death in August 2001. He was then deputy chairman of the National
Council for Provinces.
When the deal became
known, Zanele Mbeki-Dlamini offered to resell the house to the Department
of Public Affairs at the original price. In February 2003 she finally agreed
to do so, without giving any explanation. Newspapers were asked not go
give any publicity to the matter.
A spokesperson of the
Department of Public Works declined to comment.
Monwabisi
Khundulu and his gang bludgeoned deaf pensioner Matheus Palvie and
his wife, Jeanette Palivie, 54, to death with a hammer. They made off with
an alarm clock, a pink pillowcase and four cigars.
The Truth and Reconciliation
Commission refused amnesty to Khundulu, 43, in 1998, saying Jeannete
Palvie "was killed out of malice".
Yet, in May 2002, Khundulu
- who has also been repeatedly convicted ooff housebreaking and assault
- was one of 33 prisoners, all of them memmbers of either the ANC or the
PAC, who was set free by Pres Thabo Mbeki as "political prisoners".
Mbeki said he had pardoned
them because "they were incolved in the struggle,
and the reason they are in jail is a direct result of those activities".
All of those given presidential pardon were refused amnesty by the Truth
& Reconciliation Commission.
Mark Whale, a detective
who helped solve the Palvie murders, said: "It was one of the most brutal
murders I've seen. Two totally defenceless old people, and they attacked
them with hammers."
Nine months before the
murders Khundulu - then 28 and a member of the ANC yout organisation in
Cradock - was released from prison where he had served time on three counts
of housebreaking.
At his trial for the
murders Khundulu was sentenced to death, which was later commuted to life
imprisonment when the death penalty was abandoned in South Africa.
On hearing the news of
Khundulu's pardon, Brigadier Eric Strydom - the Eastern Cape's top detective
in the late 1980's - roared: "That was not political. Is this
a joke?"
Other of the 33 murderers
pardoned by Mbeki include:
Can you imagine working for a company that has a little more than 500 employees and has the following statistics:
Deputy
Minister for Social Development David Malatsi believes that charity starts
at home - and that the same applies to social development and affirmative
action.
Malatsi
received a donation of R100 000 from the Italian billionaire, Ricardo Agusta,
in May 2002 to assist him in getting approval for developing the R450 million
Roodepoort gholf estate near Plettenberg bay. This was the second donation,
the first being R300 000 given to the New National Party (NNP) in April
2002.
The
R100 000 was paid into an account on which Malatsi and his personal secretary,
Mrs Mariaan Meyer, had signing rights. The donation was not declared to
the NNP. Of this R18 000 was paid into Malatsi's bank account on Nov 14th,
2002, which amount in turn was paid over to a "guest house" in Bronkhorstspruit,
ostensibly run by the Asibamhane Women's Project, for six days of accommodation
(at R2 000 per day) for Malatsi, plus R1 000 per day for Malatsi's chauffeur.
He claimed the expenses of R18 000 from the state, apparently for attending
the World Conference on Sustainable Development.
The
"guest house", which is not fully furnished, has no signboard and no proper
sanitary facilities, belongs to Malatsi's wife. The treasurer of
Asibamhane is Malatsi's sister-in-law. His wife gave an invoice for R18
000 to Malatsi's chauffeur for the six days accommodation, requesting to
pass it to the authorities for reimbursing Malatsi.
Malatsi
was ousted from the NNP in January 2003. He stated at the time that he
had "no intention to resign as a deputy minister", something he
eventually did on January 28th, 2003, without explaining the situation
regarding his accommodation expenses during the World Conference on Sustainable
Development. He did make one last quotable quote, to whit: "There is
only one person who is clean, and that is God".
Ivy
Matsepe-Casaburri, former failed Chairperson of the SABC (who nominated
herself for her reappointment) and got lost
in Australia, later failed Premier of the Free State (where she failed
to be elected as leader of the ANC in the province), and presently redeployed
as Minister of Communications, has a problem with expressing
herself clearly all the time. At a May Day rally in 2002, she spent
nearly 90 minutes lecturing workers about everything from the duties of
unions to the danger of HIV/Aids to the virtues of South Africa's first
astronaut Mike Shuttleworth. When she saw that the bored workers were nodding
off, she jolted them back to life in a way only she could.
"The (tripartite) alliance must
be part of a broad progressive organisation that will continuously fight
to defend racism," she declared solemny without batting an eyelid.
Former
Transport Minister Mac Maharaj (left) and his wife received payments and
gifts worth more than R500 000 from Durban-based businessman Shabir Shaik
(right), who is under investigation by the Scorpions for his role in the
arms deal. Most of the payments and gifts were given before Maharaj left
the Cabinet in 1999. Under the parliamentary code of conduct, gifts and
benefits worth more than R350 received by members, their spouses, companions
or dependent children must be declared.
But not one of the gifts
or payments is logged in Maharaj's parliamentary register of members' interests.
Shaik, who is the personal financial adviser of Deputy President Jacob
Zuma, is the chief executive of Nkobi Holdings and a director of Nkobi
Investments. Nkobi Investments is part of the N3 Toll Road Consortium,
which was awarded a R2.5-billion tender to upgrade the road from Johannesburg
to Durban by the Department of Transport while Maharaj was the minister.
An Nkobi Holdings subsidiary,
Kobitech, is part of the consortium Prodiba, which won a R265-million contract
to produce new credit-card driver's licences. Maharaj declined to comment
on the payments or on his relationship with Shaik.
He said: "All contracts
awarded by the Department of Transport during my term of office are a matter
of public record."
Documents scrutinised
suggest that six payments totalling R260 000 were made to Maharaj and his
wife in the four months after he announced N3 Toll Road Consortium as the
preferred bidder.
Documents, including
bank statements, invoices, financial records and faxes show that Shaik
or his companies paid a total of R525 352 to Maharaj, his wife, Zarina,
or her company, Flisan Investments.
In addition to the payments,
an invoice shows that Shaik, through Nkobi Holdings, paid R49 857 for computers
installed at Maharaj's home in Hyde Park, Johannesburg, in 1997.
An Nkobi Holdings official
facilitated payment of import duties totalling R18 338 for a marble-top
table imported from India by Maharaj's wife.
Shaik also arranged a
trip to Disneyland for Maharaj and his family in July 1996.
Asked to comment, Shaik
said: "I don't want to answer any of your questions. Tell the Scorpions
to ask me those questions in court or ask Mac Maharaj to answer for himself."
In August 2003 Maharaj
resigned as a director of FirstRand "to save the bank group embarassment",
still denying any wrongdoing on his behalf. The investigation into Maharaj's
activities is costing FirstRand more than a million rand for legal services
rendered by the attorneys Hofmeyr Herbstein & Ghiwale, the auditing
firm Deloitte & Touche, and full page advertisements in the press.
The investigation only stated that, "on the basis of information submitted"
no proof
of wrongdoing could be found.
In the meantime Deputy
President Jacob Zuma gave answers during August 2003 to some
of the 35 questions put to him by the Scorpions, refusing to reply
to questions which he regarded as an invasion of his privacy. Businessman
Cyril Ramaphosa refused to act as mediator in the row between Zuma and
adv Bulelani Ngcuka, under whose responsibility the Scorpions fall.
In a bizarre act Maharaj
went on national television during September 2003, accusing Adv Ngcuka
(head of the Scorpions which investigated the Zuma-Maharaj affair) of having
been a government spy during the apartheid era. He could not explain why
he, as a then member of the cabinet who appointed Ngcuka to this position,
did not object then.
Judge Hefer found, after
a court hearing costing the taxpayers an estimated R12 million, that there
was no truth whatsoever in Maharaj's accusations of Ngcuka having being
an apartheid era spy.
Intelligence
Minister Lindiwe Sisulu has apologised for "the alleged insensitive and
unsavoury" questioning of journalists undergoing security competence testing
for the proposed new presidential press corps during April 2002.
This follows press reports
that the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) has been questioning full details
of journalists' sex lives, including whether or not they had ever
practised homosexual sex, as part of the security clearance process.
Among questions asked
are who the journalist has slept with, whether that was a complete list
of their sexual partners, and whether he or she has slept with members
of the same sex.
The new presidential
press corps is modelled along the lines of the White House press corps
which has privileged access to the president and travels with him on occasion.
It was proposed at the indaba between editors and senior journalists under
the umbrella of the South African National Editors Forum (Sanef) and Cabinet
in May 2001 and was scheduled to begin operation on April 30th, 2002.
It
was jokingly said after the 1994 parliamentary elections that Parliament
in Cape Town was infested by the Fat Cats. Now, it seems, that the place
is infected by rats.
ANC-MP and party whip
Elizabeth Thabethe wanted to know during a meeting in April 2002 of the
committee for the national budget whether any funds had been budgeted for
eradicating the rats. Lionel Klassen, divisional manager, organisational
assistance, admitted that they were aware of the problem and that "it was
receiving attention". Rats were not only present in the parliamentary cafeteria,
but also in the offices of MP's, especially in the older part of the building
complex and in the offices of three ANC MP's.
"They are big rats.
I have seen them in the old parliamentary building, in the men's toilets,
and some have eaten through doors. They not only are a health hazard, but
have also already eaten valuable political documents" an officer in
Parliament said.
It is not known whether
any of the rats are MP's and of which party.
Winnie
Madikizela-Mandela was unable to pay her bail of R5 000 in October 2001
when she appeared before the court in Pretoria to face 85 charges of theft
and fraud. According to Madikizela-Mandela she "earns" R17 000 per month
as a member of parliament, whilst her total monthly expenses runs to R72
169 per month. As chairperson of the ANC women's league she is not paid
any salary.
Her monthly expenses includes R5 000 for electricity, R6 000 for telephone bills, R10 671 for groceries for her "children and grandchildren", R2 800 for household staff, R4 5000 for body guards and R7 000 per month for hire purchase payments on her luxury Mercedes-Benz E240 Elegance car. According to her, she is dependent on "donations" from friends and supporters, although none of these were declared in her compulsory declaration of gifts in the parliamentary records. In the latter heading for shares and other financial interests, remuneration for work outside of parliament, directorships in companies, consultancy work, sponsorhips, gifts, benefits, travel tickets, etc. she stated "Nothing to declare" in 2000.
Madikizela-Mandela complained about the fact that she was driven to court in a police vehicle that had no air conditioning. She offered her air-conditioned Mercedes Benz for the drive to court, which the policemen declined.
Politics,
they say, makes strange bedfellows but the display by Minister of Sports
and Recreation Ngconde Balfour (better known as "Minister Nostrils") in
Cape Town in May 2001 had even his staunchest supporters shaking their
heads in dismay. Welcoming delegates to the third meeting of the International
Intergovernmental Consultative Group on Anti-Doping in Sport at a waterfront
hotel, Balfour, obviously keen to show his international guests that sport
in this country is united, asked his arch rival, Sam Ramsamy, to join him
on the stage.
The
National Olympic Committee of South Africa's (Nocsa) little Napoleon chose
to interpret 'join' rather strangely, taking up a position at the far edge
of the stage where he listened with increasing dismay to Balfour's buffoonish
speech that contained insights that white men can't jump and that anyone
who mentioned the Brumbies would be incarcerated on Robben Island.
As Balfour's speech rambled
on, being constantly interrupted by gales of laughter (his own), Ramsamy's
fixed grin became a grotesque grimace which, combined with his Yul Brynner
hairstyle, made him look, as one guest, remarked, 'like a Mahatma Ghandi
death mask'.
Could this, observers
wondered, be the same Balfour who only a few months ago called a press
conference to denounce the profligacy of Sam and his Nocsa buddies at the
Sydney Olympics - only for Nocsa to tartly point out that it had funded
Balfour's own lavish trip Down Under?
WHO'S FOR PRESIDENT?
Minister
for Safety & Security Steve Tshwete (at left) went on national
SABC TV in April 2001 and accused three senior ANC members, businessman
(and former trade unionist) Cyril Ramaphosa, former premier of Gauteng
Tokyo Sexwale, and former premier of Mpumalanga Mathews Phosa of plotting
to oust president Thabo Mbeki and deputy-president
Jacob Zuma from their positions.
Tshwete's
claims were based on a statement made by ANC youth leader James Nkambulo,
who is facing 77 charges of fraud and theft after embezzling R2,3 million
from the Mpumalanga government.
Tshwete
immediately called on the SA Police Services to undertake an official investigation
into the allegations. Police Commissioner Jackie Selebi said: "It is
our duty to investigate these kinds of allegations".
All
three "plotters" vehemently denied the accuasations. Ramaphosa called the
allegations "ludicrous and insane", Phosa said "It is rubbish" and Sexwale
said "It is complete hogwash". Ex-president Nelson Mandela came to their
defence, saying that he will "always regard them in high esteem".
Said
DP deputy leader Douglas Gibson: "Who does Tshwete think he is? His
job is to fight crime; that he is signally failing to do. The criminals
are running rampant while he is abusing his office as the minister to fight
internal party disputes in the ANC".
The
ANC called the accusations by Tshwete and the way the matter was handled
"a mistake", and pres Mbeki said the timing was bad and the names of the
three accused should not have been mentioned in public.
Tshwete
was unrepentant, refused to apologise for utilising the state's machinery
to resolve an internal party matter, and accused the media of blowing up
the matter.
A
master of evasiveness, President Thabo Mbeki outdid
himself in March 2001.
Asked by an MP to justify
the R300-million jet that the government intends buying for his personal
use, Mbeki effectively blamed his Cabinet.
"I will refer that
matter to the Cabinet. I wasn't present when the matter was discussed and
I am sure the Cabinet will find a way of answering the question".
The fact that the heads
of state of a number of countries far more affluent than South Africa,
including Japan, does not have a private jet for personal use and make
use of public air transport, apparently does not impress the South African
government.
No one could accuse Thabo
Mbeki of being a cheapskate or flying with the herd. His personal jet Inkwazi
has put a lot of his contemporaries to shame.
Tony Blair, for instance,
flies British Air on long-distance flights, sis.
Australian prime minister
John Howard has his own plane but sits in an ordinary aircraft seat, rather
than a reclining sofa.
New Zealand prime minister
Helen Clarke flies Air New Zealand. They seem to have no sense whatsoever
of their own importance.
In May 2001 Mosiuoa Lekota,
minister of defence, announced that an order had been placed with Boeing
for a new transcontinental personal jet for Mbeki at a total cost of R587
million, almost twice the amount budgeted for. The president's existing
private jet, a Falcon 900, will be retained as part of the VIP fleet. One
alternative, that of upgrading one of the Air Force's existing Boeing 707's,
was found "unacceptible".
Opposition parties pointed
out that for the cost of the new private presidential jet, 6 000 vehicles
could have been purchased for the Police, 15 000 houses could have been
built for the poor, or 600 medical clinics could have been built. Boeing
Business Jets delivered a luxurious Boeing Business Jet (BBJ) to the South
African Air Force (SAAF) for Mbeki's use in June 2001. It is a special,
high-performance derivative of the Next-Generation 737-700.
South African taxpayers
had to fork out almost R700-million for the new presidential jet, but the
Department of Defence played cloak and dagger with its latest acquisition,
landing it under cover of darkness at midnight at Air Force Base Waterkloof
late in October 2002.
Initially the minister
of defence's spokesperson, Sam Mkhwanazi, described the arrival of the
plane as a "non-event", saying it would be revealed at a function in four
weeks' time, but after intense pressure from the media and political parties
he said arrangements were being made to see if it could be photographed
earlier. It never happened.
He did not want to give
an exact arrival time and defence personnel were ordered not to give out
any information about the aircraft.
Finally the Inkwazi,
as the jet was named, was used by Mbeki for the first time in February
2003. He quietly left for a visit to France. Half an hour after take-off,
the jet had to return to it's base due to noise emanating from a door.
After repairs requiring 7 hours, the plane again left for Europe, causing
Mbeki to arrive late for his appointment.
In a statement, DA MP
Nick Clelland-Stokes called the new plane "a symbol of presidential power
and ego".
Read: A
disastrous reign
Tony
Yengeni is a staunch supporter of the SA Communist Party. That, however,
does not prevent him from supporting the government's controversial macroeconomic
policy and privatisation, and he is of the opinion that "there is nothing
wrong morally or politically for black people to become millionares".
He is not only chief whip of the ANC in parliament, but was also chairman
of the joint standing committee on defence when the controversial R43 billion
armaments deal was announced.
It now transpires that,
whilst he was chairman of the joint standing committee on defence, he received
a state-of-the-art Mercedes benz ML320 4x4 vehicle from Daimler-Chrysler's
aerospace division called DaimlerChrysler Aerospace (DASA), which was awarded
a R220-million subcontract in the R43-billion arms deal.
The car, with registration
number CA 80233, was ordered as a "private staff vehicle" by DASA, but
three days after delivery was registered in the name of Tony Yengeni in
Pretoria in October 1998. A few days later is was licensed in Cape Town-
again in Yengeni's name. The traffic department's records lists the titleholder
as being Stannic Bank, but the bank has denied this. Yengeni applied to
DaimlerChrysler Financial Services to finance the vehicle eight months
after he registred it - when questions were asked about how he paid for
it.
Yengeni refused to given
answers to the following question:
Pres
Thabo Mbeki announced in November 1998 that the Cabinet "unanimously"
supported a new armaments procurement contract for the SA National Defence
Force to the tune of R29,9 billion. He denied that Trevor Manuel, Minister
of Finance, was worried about the influence of such a large expense on
the national economy. In September 1999 the contract was finally approved
by Cabinet, but in the meantime it had increased to R43,8 billion (an increase
of 46%).
"Worried
ANC MP's" leaked a document to Patricia de Lille, PAC MP, with accusations
that senior ANC members in the Government have received bribes from weapons
manufacturers. Jayendra Naidoo, chief negotiatior for the Weapons Contract,
denied the accusations as "rubbish".
Despite
promises by Mbeki that counter trade agreements for R104 billion and the
creation of 65 000 job opportunities will realise as a result of the deal,
it attracted extensive criticism. It is argued that a country with grave
social-economic backlogs cannot afford to spend double the annual budget
for social services on fighter planes, corvettes and submarines. The value
of the defence contract is R10 billion more than the national health budget
for 2000-2001.
On
November 30th, 1999 De Lille delivered "five or six boxes of documents"
with "proof" of bribery of senior ANC members to Judge Willem Heath of
the Special Investigating Unit, known for his thorough investigations into
various matters as the "corruption
crusher" and "Judge Dread". The "proofs" came from the Coalition
for Defence Alternatives, a pacifist NGO who claimed that they received
their information from ANC MP's and other ANC members who believe that
the Government had "renounced the struggle" with the Defence contracts.
In
September 2000 Shauket Fakie, Auditor-General (AG) found that "substantial
deviations" from the accepted procurement procedures for allocating tenders
occurred. He also expressed concern about the fact that the guarantees
for counter trade were insufficient, and recommended a forensic investigation
the the primary and secondary contracts.
The
AG's report and other documents were given to the Parliamentary Standing
Committee on Public Accounts (SCOPA), who came to the conclusion that "improper
influence" was executed in the choice of the contractors, and expressed
concern that vested interests and a conflict of interests were not eliminated.
The estimation of 65 000 jobs to be created, was described as "adventurous"
and "optimistic" by SCOPA, who also criticised the Government for not properly
informing the public about the reasons for the increase from R29,9 billion
to R43,8 billion in the total cost of the contract.
SCOPA
recommended to Parliament that, due to the complicated and overlapping
nature of the investigation, four organisations - the Auditor General,
the Public Protector (PP), the Heath investigation unit, and the Investigation
Directorate for Serious Economic Misdemeanours - co-operate to thoroughly
investigate the very serious allegations regarding the armaments deal.
SCOPA's report was approved by Parliament on November 3rd, 2000, to which
the four organisations agreed on November 13th, 2000 to co-operate
in their investiations.
Gavin
Woods, chairperson of SCOPA, requested in writing on December 8th, 2000,
at the explicit request of the AG, the Public Protector, and the Directorate
for Serious Economic Misdemeanours, that the Heath unit be part of the
investigations and requested that Mbeki issue a proclamation to this effect.
It was clear that the government were reluctant to employ the services
of the Heath investigating unit.
On
January 10th, 2000 adv. Selby Baqwa, the Public Protector, recommended
(at the request of Penuell Maduna, Minister of Justice)
that Mbeki not approve "at this stage" the participation of the Heath unit.
Baqwa wrote the letter without the knowledge of Woods.
At
a surprising press conference on January 12th, 2001 four ministers, Alec
Erwin, Mosiuoa Lekota, Trevor Manuel and Jeff Radebe, unexpectedly announced
that SCOPA has "misconceptions" about the weapons contract. On January
19th, in a nationwide broadcast, Mbeki described SCOPA's conclusions about
the weapons contract as "wrong". He unleashed a blistering attack
on Woods in the form of a letter from Deputy president Jacob Zuma saying
that Woods had acted beyond his powers by writing the letter to Mbeki.
He further admonished judge Heath for having questioned the integrity of
the President and his ministers, and waded into Heath for undermining the
competence of other investigative entities.
Mbeki
further said that the Western Cape Director of Public Prosecutions, Frank
Kahn, and the Heath unit's legal adviser, Jan Lubbe had found that there
was no prima facie evidence of criminality in the arms deal. Except
that is not all that the two men said. It happens that both Mbeki and Penuell
Maduna,
Minister of Justice, quoted selectively from Lubbe and Kahn's legal opinion,
who both recommended that the Heath unit investigate the arms deal.
Three
days later the ANC members of SCOPA changed their tune and supported Mbeki
in his view that Heath's unit should not form part of the investigations.
Andrew Feinstein is removed as chairman of the ANC's component of the committee,
which is also bolstered by new party loyalists. According to ANC circles
Feinstein "had drifted away, beyond the reach of party discipline".
Mbeki
later announced that he would not refer any further investigations to the
Heath unit because they are "overloaded" with work.
In
August 2003 the investigation unit of the Scorpions, headed by adv Gerda
Ferreira, unanimously recommended that Deputy Pres Jacob Zuma be prosecuted
for corruption because prima facie evidence
exists that he tried to obtain R500 000 from a French arms company Thomsons-CSF.
However, Adv Bulelani Ngcuka, director of public prosecution, yielded under
intense political pressure and announced that he would not
prosecute Zuma. Zuma's financial adviser, Shabir Shaik, was however
arrested for similar offences. Zuma's gifts and benefits from Shaik and
other parties will be referred to Parliament for a decision.
See:
Making
the weapon's scandal disappear. and A disastrous
reign
The
April 2000 issue of Getaway magazine, a journal which caters for
owners of 4x4s and their like, contains an interesting article under the
by-line of the head of state, Pres Thabo Mbeki,
dealing with the "African renaissance".
One paragraph in the
article states: "We recall that African armies at Omduraman in the Sudan
and Isandhlwana in South Africa defeated the armies of the mighty British
Empire."
"Omduraman" could not
be found in the history books, nor on any map of the world. But detective
work on the Internet uncovered a Battle of "Omdurman" in 1898 when Kitchener
clashed with the Mahdist forces of Muhammad Ahmad. Unfortunately Kitchener's
lot killed 11 000 and wounded 16 000 while British losses totalled 430.
Deputy
president Jacob Zuma decided that having two wives was not enough: each
had to have her own official government sponsored car. The polygamist deputy
president is divorced from his former third wife, Minister of Foreign Affairs
Nkosazana
Zuma, who receives a government car in her own right as a minister
of the cabinet. After their divorce Nkosazana Zuma claimed that she had
been Jacob Zuma's "only legal wife".
Opposition groups criticised
Zuma, who is number two to President Thabo Mbeki, for obtaining a Mercedes
and an off-road Toyota worth R557 500 each at the taxpayers' expense. A
letter issued by the Office of the Presidency in reply to a written question
from the opposition Democratic Party said the cars were "for the spouses
of the Deputy President."
A government spokesman
told local newspapers that the two cars were "justified because Zuma
carried out additional duties to that of an ordinary sitting member of
parliament". The opposition United Democratic Movement blasted the
government for encouraging a culture of self-indulgence and enrichment
while millions of South Africans live in abject poverty.
Polygamist deputy president
Jacob Zuma's conjugal visits to his wives is costing the South African
taxpayers a small fortune. During the first four months of 2000, visits
to just KwaZulu-Natal has run up a flight bill of R656 530. It includes
two Air Force helicopter flights to see one of his two wives at a cost
of more than R67 000. The bulk of the flights have been "official".
Twice,
in January 2000 and over the Easter weekend, Zuma has been flown in an
air force Oryx helicopter to visit MaKhumalo Zuma, who lives at Nkandla
in rural northern KwaZulu-Natal. His other wife, Kate Zuma, lives in Johannesburg.
These visits alone cost R67 704 at an average cost of R16 926 an hour,
according to information supplied by the Air Force. The deputy president
has run up further bills of at least R743 559 on other flights this year.
Zuma's spokeswoman, Mathula
Magubane, said all flights had been "necessary". "He has to go
to his home sometime", she said, not quite explaining where "home"
is supposed to be.
He has been flown on
a variety of air force aircraft - including the Falcon 900 and smaller
Falcon 50, a transport plane (Casa 212), Oryx and BK117 helicopters, and
a twin propeller craft. Their cost in the air ranges between R4 259 and
R9 038 an hour.
Kate Zuma died on December
8th, 2000. The Presidency announced that she had died of heart failure,
and she was given a semi-state funeral that was addressed by Pres Thabo
Mbeki and Nelson Mandela.
In March 2001 it was
announced that she did, in fact, die of an overdose of drugs which she
had taken.
For the time being deputy
president Zuma has only one wife. Watch this space.
Dr
Fido Maforah was appointed as chief director in the Department of Welfare
in May 1998. Since then the department has been riddled with allegations
of corruption. One of her assistant directors, Olga Mtheleni, is in jail
for defrauding a poverty relief project of R800 000.
Another
former senior department official in the Western Cape is being investigated
by the state prosecutor for allegedly defrauding the poverty alleviation
programmes of approximately R500 000.
In
February 2000 the Auditor-General disclosed that the Welfare Department
had spent less than 1% of the R204-million it was allocated for poverty
relief in the 1998/99 financial year. Parliament heard in March 2000 that
poor South Africans were deprived of more than R500-million over the past
three years because the Welfare Department was incapable of distributing
funds, including those for poverty relief, disability grants, pensions,
child support grants and HIV/AIDS projects.
In
March 2000 Maforah was suspended by the Minister of Welfare and Population
Development, Zola Skweyiya, after allegations of financial irregularities
in her department.
During
all this time Maforah was allegedly recruiting staff as distributors for
Amway - one of the world's largest direct-selling companies - to sell household
goods including pots, pans, perfumes, washing powder, cosmetics, multivitamins
and car-washing liquids. For every person she recruited who sold productrs,
Maforah was paid an extra bonus.
Allegations
include that Maforah:
“We’ve
been standing here on the street longer than 26 seconds. Nobody has been
raped”.
"Adapt
or die!"
- Min Membathisi Mdladlana,
Minister of Labour, in an address during February 2001 directed to farmers
in South Africa. In view of the fact that more than a thousand farmers
had been murdered since the ANC/SA Communist Party regime took over in
1994, this was regarded as an extremely unhappy choice of words. Mdladlana
was unrepentant.
Within
one week of being appointed as Minister of Safety and Security, the national
chairman of the South African Communist Party Charles Nqakula was asked
to comment on the statistic that one out of every three children in South
Africa are abused some time or another. Replied Nqakula:
"I have more than three
children at home, and yesterday not one of them was abused".
During the World Summit on Sustainable Development, held in Johannesburg during August 2002, Joburg Mayor Amos Masondo and chief executive of the event organising company Moss Mashishi held a press conference. Masondo extolled his own virtues as mayor and extensively described his own contributions
Masondo droned on endlessly about what a nice place Joburg was and Mashishi about what a great job Masondo had done. "I know I'm making a meal of this," said Mashishi. "I want to thank everybody who put their wheel to their shoulder."
See if you can spot the racist bigot.
If
we said, "think politician," you would probably think of a fat man kissing
a baby or a bungling fool with his feet in his mouth. Combine these images
- the fat and the foolish parts - and readd these extracts that come from
the official minutes of a UCB meeting with South African minister of sport
Ngconde Balfour (photo at left), known as "Mr Nostrils", and your vision
comes alive...
"You
say black players don't want to feel like quota players. Tough shit. It
is the media that calls them that. It is for more players
than them. If they can't stand it they must get out. I don't care a shit
about that. They must take the pressure like we had to in the struggle,"
the Minister said.
The Minister said that he did not go to Newlands to watch players like Boucher and Kallis (photo at right). He went to watch Paul Adams and Makhaya Ntini. "Who is Jacques Kallis? Jacques Kallis means nothing to me," he said, adding that black people wanted black people on the field.
Makhenkesi
Arnold Stofile was premier of the Eastern Cape Province from February 1997
to May 2004. During his term of office, he was severely criticised for
mismanagement and the high level of corruption in his province, the poorest
in the country. It was no surprise that he was not re-appointed as premier
by pres Thabo Mbeki after the April 2004 elections. To everyone's surprise,
he was however appointed as Minister of Sport and Recreation in the national
cabinet.
After his appointment,
Stofile commented as follows: "It's as if a huge rock has been lifted
off my shoulders... The media made me out to be a thief who did not have
the interests of the people at heart. The people of the Eastern Cape were
disrespectful, they fabricated lies and were always conspiring."
One may forgive the Minister in the Office of the Presidency, Essop Pahad -- in charge of things like the presidential press corps (PPS) and Government Communications and Information System (GCIS) -- for silly slips of the tongue. After all, he has a lot on his mind what with South Africa's spies having to drop their questions about hacks' sex lives, but still insisting on personal interviews and full financial disclosures.
So during his GCIS budget speech in May 2002 it was out of pure exhaustion over how best to get government's message across that the minister kept referring to the PPS as the press corpse in his written speech ...
During a debate early
in the 1997 Parliamentary session, Andries Beyers (NP) was speaking. Nkenke
Kekana (ANC/SACP) interjected: "Mr Chairman, on a point of order: is
it in order for a member to mislead this House by claiming that..."
The temporary chairman,
Kisten Rajoo intervened: "Order! That is not a point of order. Please
be seated".
Kekana: "Mr Chairman..."
Rajoo: "Order! That
is not a point of order. I have made my ruling. The honourable member Mr
Beyers may proceed".
Piet Coetzer (NP): "Mr
Chairman, I rise on a point of order. I apologise to my colleague, but
his time is not running because the clock stops. The previous speaker who
tried to raise a point of order, which was not a point of order, said specifically
that the hon Mr Beyers was misleading the House. I ask your ruling on that".
Rajoo: "Order! I cannot
rule on what a previous speaker stated when another presiding officer was
chairing".
Coetzer: "Mr Chairman,
if I may further address you on this point: I was specifically referring
to the accusation by the hon member Mr Kekana who stood up and tried to
raise a point of order while you were in the chair. I am not referring
to a previous speaker".
Rajoo: "I have already
ruled that the hon member was out of order and I ordered him to be seated.
I told the hon member Mr Beyers to continue. If the point of order was
not recognised, how can I rule on what was said? The hon member may continue".
Wille Hofmeyr (ANC):
"Mr Chairman, on a point of order: Is it in order for the chair to rule
on a point fo order without hearing what it is?"
Rajoo: "Order! I have
given my ruling. If the hon member wants to take it up, he should lease
put it in writing to me. The hon member may continue...."
[Laughter in the house].
SLIPPING STANDARDS
ANC MP Maria Rantho, as
reported in a speech delivered in Parliament:
"It is imperative
to get rid of merit as the overriding principle in the appointment of public
servants".
A SOUND KNOT
ANC MP Johnny de Lange,
who is also chairman of Parliament's Justice Committee, is known to seldom
wear a tie round his neck. Apparently he has been warned that he should
be more presentable when he appears in public.
So when colleague Willie
Hofmeyr (also without a tie) asked him to honour a request for an interview
from the national broadcaster, De Lange obliged, but dashed for his tie
first.
It was only when he arrived
in the studio that he realised that he was required for an interview on
radio.
SCORE CARD
The Democratic Party announced
its "report card" on the national government during November 1997, awarding
ministers marks out of ten.
Four ministers scored
nil out of ten. They are:
* dr Sibusiso Bengu (Minister of Education), for getting rid of the most experienced teachers;Pres Nelson Mandela receives 5½ because he is "half way retired" and for his ill-conceived visits to Indonesia and Libya. Deputy President Thabo Mbeki receives 4 out of ten.
* Sankie Mthembi-Mahanyele (Minister of Housing), for firing the excellent Director-General Billy Cobbet after he exposed the Motheo housing scandal;
* Alfrex Nzo (Minister of Foreign Affairs) for his lack of a unified foreign policy; and
* Steve Tshwete (Minister of Sport) for ensuring that the government interferes in sport.
Min Nkosazana Zuma received one out of ten, the motivation being that "it is remarkable that she spent only R2,8 million to improve her image".
LISTING IT ALL
In February 1998 the Register
of MP's Interests was published. Of all the lists of gifts from ingratiating
favour seekers, none was as impressive as that of Labour Minister Tito
Mboweni.
His gifts included "Hat,
Wine and Glass, Two Ties, Miss SA, Desk Mate, Tie, Cuff Links".
Initially several MP's
listed little or nothing, including the Minister of Sport, Steve,Tshwete,
and Jannie Momberg, ANC MP. After initially disclosing nothing, Momberg
stepped forward to declare interests in excess of R400 000, closely followed
by Tshwete, who initially listed only the gift of a bubu (African suit)
but then came forward to declare that he had received three bottles of
brandy from the Greek Minister of Sport. It is unknown whether the latter
was given before or after October 5, 1997, the day the International Olympic
Committee awarded the 2004 Olympic Games to Athens.
WELL DRESSED
Deputy minister of Environmental
Affairs and Tourism, Peter Mokaba, was forced to repay two amounts of R7
360 and R13 098 respectively which he spent, using his official ministerial
credit card, in the United States and Monaco. It was for new clothes -
a suit in the US, and a coat, jacket and two trousers in Monaco. Mokaba
claimed that the purchases were necessary to replace lost luggage. Further
purchases in South Africa at Pick 'n Pay and CNA, also using his ministerial
credit card, also had to be repaid.
"I dress well because
I am not a white liberal, and I will not go to our people with unkempt
clothes", Mokaba said.
Mokaba was also in the
news when he had to repay R1 400 at the end of 1997 after he used office
facilities to copy and distribute an ANC document.
VANISHING PARLIAMENT
According to a list handed
out to staff and members of South Africa's main legislature, thousands
of rands worth of personal belongings, from microwave ovens to laptop computers
have gone missing from the Parliamentary buildings in 1996.
A rash of thefts was
reported in the initial stages of South Africa's new democracy, when the
feeling of freedom appeared to extend to taking anything from TV sets from
offices, to electronic diaries belonging to ANC minister's wives.
In September 1996 police
handed out lists of stolen articles. In two cases, duplicate keys were
used to open offices and steal computers. Other examples on the list: microwave
ovens, "12 cups and saucers, 2 steal (sic) mugs plus computer mouse.
Kitchen not locked".
Duplicate keys were also
used to steal answering machines, a R50 note, dictaphone and calculator,
and R200 was stolen from a locked, steel cabinet.
Other items reported
include: "Windscreen wipers (Durablades)...replaced by old wipers".
"Silver hubcap off Mazda Sting". Then a few days later the other
three were stolen from the same government car. Also reported missing were
a silver toilet handle, a pair of size 9½ men's black shoes, 10
lengths of cream curtains, three Collins thesauri, two law dictionaries
and a multi-language dictionary.
It was reported that
the minister's wife's electronic dictionary mysteriously reappeared back
in her office after it had been reported missing in the list that was distributed.
NOTHING
NEW UNDER THE SUN
IFP MP Albert Mnewango,
during the debate on the Land Restitution and Reform Laws Amendment Bill
in Parliament:
"Minister Derek Hanekom
likes to pretend that the issue has been successfully negotiated and resolved,
but that is only because he runs around like one of the former ministers
of Native Affairs, issuing orders left, right and centre".
VOTING WITH THEIR KIDS
The ANC used its majority in the Education Committee in parliament to bulldoze through the amended Schools Bill, which will ensure an "egalitarian schools system". The vast majority of the committee send their children to private schools, which will be unaffected by the changes prescribed by the bill.
ABOVE AVERAGE
After awarding themselves a 15% salary increase and a 30% increase in their car allowances in 1996, the average member of parliament earned 32 times more than the average South African. The chairperson of the Youth Commission, 26 year old Mahlangu Bengu, earned R30 000 per month. During 1996 the State appointed 1 723 consultants, who earned a total of R347,2 million.
PREMATURE PARTY
The biggest party held during 1996 was to celebrate the acceptance of the final Constitution. It was held at the Parliament on March 9th, at a cost of R1,3 million. During the party Finance Minister Trevor Manuel danced a merry jig with trade union Cosatu boss Sam Shilowa. Afterwards the Constitutioal Court referred the constitution back to Parliament to amend a number of articles, and the final constitution was only signed on December 10th, 1996 - nine months after the celebratory party.
ACCOUNTABILITY AND SEAMANSHIP
Aide Sefako Nyaka was
brought in to polish up the image of the premier of Mapumalanga,
Mr "Lies" Ndaweni Mahlangu. At a press conference after Mahlangu delivered
his opening addres to the provincial parliament, Mahlangu was asked
some questions by journalists regarding his opening speech. Before Mahlangu
could try to reply, Nyaka stepped in:
"He cannot comment on
the content of his speech because he did not write it, and you may therefore
ask him something he does not know" he cut journalists short.
Later in the year, addressing
the Mpumalanga Legislature this week, Mahlangu used some interesting maritime
language.
Said he: "We have
reached the calm seas. But we can still hear the sound of the raging
seas as wave upon angry wave batter the hull of our raft, throwing us from
one end of the ship to the other."
Not bad for the premier
of a landlocked province.
DEAD GIVEAWAY
Addressing the media in
Cape Town on the occasion of the ANC's 87th birthday, President Thabo
Mbeki told a story of two white men in Eskom clothing who climbed up a
pole on the Cape Flats and, after tinkering with cables, left in an Eskom
van. Local residents immediately knew they were policemen because,
he said, "since when have you seen a white man go up a pole?"
The surveillance cameras
planted on the pole were promptly stolen.
SEEING RED
The SACP (South African
Communist Party) is well represented in the cabinet. But the party is worried
about the uncomradely behaviour of some of its most prominent members.
There's Public Service
and Administration Minister Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi (deputy chairman
of the SACP), who is stifling the wage demands of public sector workers.
Then there's Public Enterprises
Minister Jeff Radebe (central committee of the SACP), who is overseeing
the withering away of the state by rapid privatisation.
There's Provincial Affairs
Minister Sydney Mufamadi (central committee of the SACP), who plans
to trim public servants at a local level by introducing "public-private
partnerships".
And, of course, there's
Trade and Industry Minister Alec Erwin (central committee of the
SACP), who is seeing that global capital flows in and out of the country
with as few restrictions as possible.
With communists
like these, who needs capitalists?
SAYING IT AS IT IS
The curriculum vitae of Deputy President, Jacob Zuma, is posted on the official government web site for the world to see. Listed under positions and "other activities" is the rather bland statement: "Involved in human rights abuses while in exile."
MORAL RECTITUDE
Probably less intentional, but equally illuminating, was the submission by the New National Party's Ludwig Andersen during the debate in the provincial assembly over moral regeneration during May 2002. "This House, yes, Madam Speaker every member of this House, must commit him or her today to the moral degeneration process in this province," he told the delighted gathering.
Barely
four hours after being appointed Communications Minister, Ivy Matsepe Casaburri
made her first mistake.
In a television interview
on the SABC, which she once headed, she twice referred to the burden
of having to solve the "2YK" problem - the millennium bug that threatened
to crash the world's computers. The minister was quietly advised to use
the correct phrase - Y2K - if she wanted to win the confidence of the communications
world.
When
the Auditor General, Henri Kluver, brought out a report on the finances
of the Strategic Oil Fund during 1997, the then Minister of Minerals, Energy
and Oil Affairs Penuell Maduna accused him of hiding a R170-million transaction
and being guilty of "some nimble footwork" and hiding "behind
the fig leaf" of secrecy surrounding oil transactions during a National
Assembly date in June 1997.
R30 million later for
legal and auditing costs paid by the taxpayer, an investigation ordered
by the Minister proved that nothing untoward happened to the funds and
that the R170-million "loss" was the result of a change in accounting procedures.
The Minister has yet
to apologise to Kluver, or explain the expenditure of the investigtion
in Parliament. He was, however, ordered to apologise in parliament by a
parliamentary committee who investigated the matter.
Public Protector Selby
Baqwa, who investigated the matter further (considering 25 000 pages of
written evidence) and filed a report to Parliament, found that the Maduna
has "knowlingly misled the public". By making disparaging remarks
against an independent institution such as the auditor-general (whilst
knowing that the accusations were untrue), Maduna also "violated the
spirit of the Constitution, which compels the organs of state to protect
such institutions". Baqwa has recommended that Parliament find an appropriate
sanction for such a transgression but also said that the matter is too
serious to be remedied by a simple apology. The Speaker of Parliament,
Frene Ginwala, has established a committee of MPs to discuss the report
and recommend a course of action on Maduna, who now is Minister Justice
and Constitutional Development .
In April 2000 Baqwa glided
into Parliament to appear before the committee, again stating that Maduna
had acted unconstitutionally in making the false accusations against an
office protected in the Constitution and had to be censured.
The investigation into
Maduna's allegations took two and a half years to complete, generated 25
000 pages of evidence, and cost taxpayers about R30-million to complete.
To date Maduna has not
apologised to either Kleuver or Parliament, and the ANC has yet to act
against him.
ANC MP Andries Nel was
asked early in 2000 to chair a committee to consider the contentious report
from the Public Protector.
After postponing the
reporting date times, the committee eventually delivered its report to
Parliamant at the end of February 2001. The committee, loaded with
ANC supporters, did little more than pass on most of the issues raised
by Baqwa to a clutch of parliamentary committees, and limply failed to
pronounce on the issue of a further sanction against Maduna. Instead, it
referred the issue of legislative measures to ensure institutions like
the auditor general are protected, to parliament's constitutional review
commitees and the justice commitee.
The jury is still out
on suitable ways to act against the false allegations made by Maduna against
Kluever.
GOLDEN
HANDSHAKE
Subtitle:
Who wants to be a millionaire?
Faith
Sithole was sacked as head of the Mpumalanga Education Department by the
new MEC for education, Craig Padayachee, in Jaunary 2000. This followed
after manipulation of matric results in December 1998 when examiners noticed
that Mpumalanga's matric pupils' marks in certain subjects were extremely
bad. The examiners recommended that the marks be moderated by adding up
to 60 marks, leading to an increase of between 15 and 20 percentage points
in some subjects' results.
In July 1999 Sithole
was suspended and subsequently charged with negligence and misrepresentation
in that she authorised the release of the fraudulent reults. Four months
later, still waiting for a disciplinary hearing, Sithole informed the department
she would be returning to her post. A second suspension on new charges
promptly followed. This time she was accused of failing to disclose interest
in a company which supplied textbooks and stationery to schools and of
ordering cleaning chemicals without following procedures. Sithole denied
all charges and claims that she was made a scapegoat for the matric results
scandal.
After sacking her, the
department offered Sithole R2,6 million or a position in the Premier's
Office.
She took the money.
PAID TO STAY AT HOME
The Mpumalanga provincial
government is currently spending at least R1-million a month to keep more
100 corrupt officials away from work. Moreover, officials from the African
National Congress complain that the cost of taking disciplinary action
against corrupt officials is often higher than simply paying the officials
not to work.
According to detailed
charges released in March 2000 by the Mpumalanga administration, larger
numbers of senior provincial employees were involved in corruption than
previously thought. The 106 officials accused of corruption have been suspended
pending internal investigations into the charges but are still being paid
their monthly salaries and benefits despite not working.
The officials include
a health department employee who allegedly refused to assist a drowning
patient at a provincial hospital, three teachers who have allegedly attempted
to rape school pupils and a fourth teacher who is accused of sexually abusing
a pupil.
Documents presented in
the Mpumalanga legislature show that a housing department official forged
documents to secure a free house for his mother while a public works official
allegedly defrauded the state of R3-million by awarding tenders to a company
he owned.
ANC officials say that
scores of other charges are being investigated.
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF MPARALANGA
In
May 2000, a Department of Public Service and Administration investigation
into the qualifications of 71 senior officials in the Mpumalanga
province found that 10 of them have fake degrees. The qualifications of
10 others are being viewed as "highly suspicious".
Director-general Shadreck
Coleman Nyathi has spun a web of lies from Zimbabwe to South Africa about
his academic qualifications and citizenship. It is alleged that he is an
illegal immigrant from Zimbabwe.
Nyathi, who is the administrative
head and accounting officer of Mpumalanga, denied lying on his CV
and twice told the Sunday Times reporter that "if you expose me I will
kill you. I will shoot you."
Nyathi claimed in his
CV that: