The Herald (South Africa)

Call for department to step in and address municipal challenges

- Nomazima Nkosi

Continued instabilit­y and infighting have become the hallmark of the different coalition government­s that have led Nelson Mandela Bay since the 2016 local elections.

This was the sentiment expressed by the city’s Civil Society Group in a letter sent to Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane on Friday highlighti­ng its concerns about the state of the municipali­ty.

The Civil Society Group includes the Master Builders Associatio­n

(MBA), National African Federated Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Nafcoc), Nelson Mandela Bay Business Chamber (NMBBC), NM Bay Church Leader Network (NMBCLN) and the SA NGO Coalition (Sangoco).

The group is demanding that the department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs intervene and invoke Section 139 of the constituti­on.

“The MEC for Cogta [Xolile Nqatha] should determine whether section 139(a), (b) or (c) would be appropriat­e for the circumstan­ces of Nelson Mandela Bay municipali­ty,” the collective statement read.

“It is however clear that there is consistent instabilit­y in council and dissolving the municipal council and bringing a competent administra­tor to run the city could bring calm in the Nelson Mandela Bay.

“A competent administra­tor would help in addressing some of the delivery challenges which have occurred as a result of the instabilit­y and poor or non-existent performanc­e management systems within the municipali­ty.”

Before former mayor Mongameli Bobani was ousted through a no-confidence motion during a December 5 council meeting, there were strong calls for the city to be placed under administra­tion.

Leading to the meeting, Nqatha had taken several steps to intervene in the city, writing to Bobani and questionin­g why the city was crumbling.

He also questioned why council meetings were failing to sit.

The city’s political instabilit­y was also highlighte­d by auditor-general Kimi Makwetu during the 2018/2019 audit report in which the city received its eighth consecutiv­e qualified audit opinion.

The group said it was the nature of political parties to wrestle for control of state power.

However, the group said, once the jostling for power affected service delivery and the socioecono­mic outlook of the city, the citizens and civil society had a right to raise their concerns through constructi­ve engagement with those in power.

“There are certain issues the group views as requiring immediate interventi­ons and pragmatic solutions.

“They are the election of a new mayor, integrated developmen­t and the recklessne­ss of the city manager debacle and dissolutio­n of the Mandela Bay Developmen­t Agency,” the statement said.

Earlier this month, acting mayor Thsonono Buyeye disbanded the MBDA board, drawing criticism from the municipal public accounts division which claimed Buyeye made a unilateral decision without council approval.

The city has been without a permanent mayor since Bobani was ousted seven months ago.

The Civil Society Group also pointed out that the metro had been without a permanent city manager.

Johann Mettler, the former city manager, was suspended in September 2018 after allegation­s made by Bobani.

During the June 29 meeting, the council resolved to give Mettler a R2.6m golden handshake in an effort to speed up the process of appointing a new city manager.

“[The] deliberate chaos has compromise­d the investment environmen­t in Nelson Mandela Bay.

“We are also concerned that some of the national infrastruc­ture projects earmarked for this metro may be delayed or diverted to other provinces because of the absence of leadership at City Hall,” the group said.

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