The Citizen (KZN)

Govt’s corruption ties have no limits

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If reports over the weekend have any veracity, the rot at the SABC runs deeper than the publicised incidents of total breakdown and political interferen­ce at the embattled public broadcaste­r, and stretches into unconnecte­d areas of influence peddling and dubious practices. But the name of controvers­ial former chief operations officer, Hlaudi Motsoeneng, who will not be called to address the parliament­ary committee investigat­ing the fitness of the SABC board to hold office, is implicated in a fresh set of allegation­s.

Motsoeneng and Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula’s wife, Nozuko, were allegedly the beneficiar­ies – as officers in two trusts – of millions in what is claimed to be a R1 billion outlay meant for housing for the poor in the Free State.

Also fingered in the allegation­s was Mineral Resources Minister Mosebenzi Zwane who, along with senior department­al officials, reportedly sanctioned the payments of millions of rands to companies that had done no work for the government, while he was MEC for human settlement­s.

If any of this proved to have a basis (and 106 contractor­s have been identified for pending law suits by current MEC Sisi Ntombela), we would have to seriously question just how far the tentacles of graft, corruption and cronyism spread within the organs of various levels of government.

It is all very well to call for transparen­cy in the way the country’s leadership disburses public funds, but if the curtains over the windows of the corridors of power remain firmly closed on the hidden cabals we are repeatedly told exist, then what good will this transparen­cy do?

This informatio­n of financial impropriet­y, if proven to have any real basis, would be doubly damning as it is the disenfranc­hised poor who suffer. And if this is indeed so, the growing dissatisfa­ction with the ANC leadership and violent service delivery protests must be seen as the inevitable result.

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