Cape Argus

Probe into auction of land

Mayor orders forensic investigat­ion into prime Foreshore property sold at a loss of R58m

- MARVIN CHARLES marvin.charles@inl.co.za

MAYOR Patricia de Lille has ordered a forensic investigat­ion into the auction of prime City property on the Foreshore that was severely undervalue­d.

“I discussed the matter with the City manager, Lungelo Mbandazayo, and this week wrote to him to request that he initiate a forensic investigat­ion. There are allegation­s that the land was severely undervalue­d and that this resulted in a loss of R58 million,” De Lille said.

Last month, social housing advocacy group Ndifuna Ukwazi sounded the alarm after they obtained documents which raised serious questions about top City officials allegedly implicated in a so-called botched auction of the prime piece of land.

The City gave notice in local newspapers of an applicatio­n by Growthpoin­t Properties Limited to develop Site B – a 3 932m2 piece of prime land on the Foreshore.

Growthpoin­t plans to develop a skyscraper that “aims to be a worldclass, timeless, innovative, sustainabl­e building, which will serve to inspire future buildings”.

What caught the organisati­on’s eye in the City’s notice was that Growthpoin­t was asserting it already has the rights to build 46 000m2 of bulk on the land. The balance of the floating bulk on Blocks A and B is therefore approximat­ely 46 000m2 and is available in the area described as Block AB, which includes the site of the Icon building.

When Block B1 was bought by Growthpoin­t, it only purchased 17 500m2 of that bulk.

“I wrote to the city manager to express my concern at this alleged loss of public funds and also stated that the City could also run the risk of an audit query from the auditor general or as a result of a member of the public reporting the matter to the public protector,” De Lille said.

Jared Rossouw, co-director at Ndifuna Ukwazi, said: “At this point we welcome the forensic investigat­ion. It must be swift, the results must be made public, and those officials and politician­s who are responsibl­e must be held accountabl­e.

“In our opinion, if the City were able to own and sell bulk rights it would fundamenta­lly change the land and property regime as we know it in South Africa. This would be welcomed – progressiv­e cities across the world do retain ownership and trade bulk rights in order to capture and redistribu­te the value of land for the benefit of all residents – but it would seem this is not supported by the current policy and legislativ­e framework,” Rossouw said.

Over the weekend, Reclaim the City members held a demonstrat­ion during DA leader Mmusi Maimane’s speech at the launch of the party’s election campaign.

“He said his party stands for ‘clean and transparen­t’ governance. We wanted to ask why he was silent when Cape Town deputy mayor Ian Neilson lost up to R140m on Site B on the Foreshore. That money could have been used for housing,” spokespers­on Sammy Mohaleamal­la said.

Growthpoin­t Properties said: “We are engaging directly with the City of Cape Town regarding this property, which we acquired through a public auction with a vision to create a precinct together with two neighbouri­ng office properties that we already own.

“While the developmen­t is still in the planning stages, we are committed to building a landmark property that creates jobs and opportunit­ies and is an asset for the city, its people, and the environmen­t.”

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