The Star Late Edition

Chaos on the rise in Ditsobotla

- Mokgatlhe is a freelance writer and thought-leader

DANGER, disaster, and dysfunctio­nal are words that can easily sum up the drama taking place at the troubled Ditsobotla local municipali­ty in the North West. The municipali­ty was dissolved due to its inability to pay workers for more than five months and failure to meet its service delivery mandate in 2022.

Subsequent­ly, Parliament resolved to dissolve the municipali­ty, which was under the rule of the divided ANC, where there was a parallel council consisting of two speakers, two mayors, and two municipal managers.

As if that is enough, the bi-elections brought more drama wherein the Patriotic Alliance’s Elizabeth Lethoko was elected as a mayor with the help of the ANC, which failed to secure an outright majority. Lethoko resigned a few hours after being elected to office. In a twist of events, she went back the following day to reclaim her office, claiming to be “withdrawin­g” her resignatio­n.

A party known as Forum 4 Service Delivery (F4SD) submitted a motion of no confidence against Lethoko, which was successful­ly debated last week wherein the new mayor, Thabo Nkashe from F4SD, was elected in a council sitting where the ANC and other minority parties did not attend but formed a quorum.

The municipali­ty does not only worry about the payment of workers. They are also worried about the creditors, as their debt stands at R4.4 billion and could dramatical­ly go higher due to arrears and services rendered not being paid, such as electricit­y and security. They are expecting a more equitable share from the treasury, which will not make much improvemen­t as it will only be able to pay the salaries of workers who are not going to work due to not receiving their salaries since last month.

One creditor, Onkarabile Mogapi, successful­ly took the municipali­ty to Lichternbu­rg Magistrate’s Court, where the Sheriff was ordered to put movable properties belonging to the municipali­ty to public auction, where they sold cars and trailers amounting to between R15 to R20 million.

Another creditor won his case, where he took the computers of the municipali­ty containing sensitive and personal informatio­n. However, the municipali­ty successful­ly interdicte­d the creditor and sheriff from selling the property at an auction.

When the former mayor, Lethoko, appeared before the provincial legislatur­e, she made it clear to the lawmakers the municipali­ty was so broke they could not afford to buy toilet paper to be used at the headquarte­rs. It is clear the municipali­ty has completely collapsed, and not much can be done to save it because it is just non-existent.

A few years ago, when the biggest dairy company, Clover, left Lichtenbur­g due to poor service delivery (no water, electricit­y, and bad roads), I thought the local, district, and provincial government­s would be ashamed and correct their conduct. However, the situation became worse, wherein they did not even try to put up a fight to stop them from leaving. They could have made promises to the company and fulfilled such promises by restoring clean water, building roads, and fixing electricit­y issues.

What is troublesom­e is that political parties are not united to end the Ditsobotla disaster waiting to happen.

I know of Ramotshere Moiloa local municipali­ty, that owes Eskom R100 million and have no idea of how they will be able to pay off the debt. They are clueless.

 ?? KENNETH MOKGATLHE ??
KENNETH MOKGATLHE

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