Category Archives: Thando Mgaga

Witness: No heads roll over R6 mln fraud

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=76338

No heads roll over R6 mln fraud

Thando Mgaga

NOT a single head has rolled after five years of repeatedly delayed investigations into the embezzlement of nearly R6?million from a project launched to help the poorest of the poor in 1996.

The KZN Legislature was told this yesterday during the presentation of a report on a forensic investigation into the Social Development Department’s poverty alleviation programme.

It left members of the standing committee on public accounts (Scopa) aghast. The words “gobsmacked”, “perturbed”, “annoyed” and “angry” flew around.

The MPLs were told that the fraudsters used the money earmarked for uplifting the poorest of the poor to build their own homes.

“People were given money for NGO projects and instead they were building houses for themselves,” said Belinda Scott of the ANC.

The investigation is aimed at recovering more than R5,8 million in embezzled funds from the Sustainable Livelihood Programme and to prosecute the culprits.

The department believes that it will be able to recover R3?244?452, according to the report. Of this amount it has already recovered R2 121 768 from the Pietermaritzburg, Midlands, Durban and Ulundi regional office clusters.

An additional R2?627?545 has still to be recovered from 114 individuals and organisations that had signed acknowledgements of debt.

The frauds took place before the Public Finance Management Act came into operation.

ANC MPL Rina Naidoo asked how many of the 140 people implicated in defrauding the department between 1996 and 2006 were still alive.

“If they are, let’s get the money back.

“Those who are dead, let’s get death certificates from Home Affairs as proof that they are dead.”

Police who were part of the investigation told Scopa they had sometimes hit dead ends because prosecutors declined to follow through for lack of sufficient evidence.

Scopa members expressed anger that some of the eight officials being investigated have resigned and that others have moved to other departments within the province.

Reports about the investigations were forwarded to departments where some of the implicated officials had moved, which has meant that they are not being investigated.

African Christian Democratic Party MPL Jo-Ann Downs said it was shocking that since the fraud was uncovered in 2002 no action has been taken.

Roman Liptak of the Inkatha Freedom Party said the committee was concerned that the disciplinary hearings had not even been finalised.

“The numbers of disciplinary proceedings against the responsible officials per region run in single digits, with one region (Midlands) apparently having no one to discipline,” said Liptak.

He said the IFP did not understand how some officials could fail to be linked to cases of fraud that were happening under their watch or how those who had been implicated could move to other government departments with impunity.

The head of the department, Bheki Nkosi, said he empathised with the MPLs and admitted that the probe had lagged. However, he said, he was sure the investigations would yield the desired results.

The MEC for Social Development, Weziwe Thusi, assured the committee members that she and Nkosi would meet to map a way forward in addressing Scopa’s concerns.

Witness: Govt urged: ‘Halt this destruction’

Govt urged: ‘Halt this destruction’
13 Nov 2009
Thando Mgaga

BRUNTVILLE residents in Mooi River yesterday called on the government to intervene
and stop the destruction of hostel blocks, which was allegedly ordered by an ANC ward
councillor.

The Inkatha Freedom Party, the opposition in the Mpofana Municipality, and hostel
dwellers who spoke to The Witness on condition of anonymity for fear of being
victimised, said that hostel blocks were damaged because the councillor, Sifiso Mkhize,
had said that they were occupied by IFP supporters. They alleged that Mkhize sent his
bodyguards to deface the hostel blocks with sledgehammers.

About 24 units of three hostel blocks do not have roofs, windows are broken and the
adjoining walls have been destroyed.

Hostel residents said that some of the roofs and windows were destroyed while they
were still inside the hostel units, adding that Mkhize’s bodyguards did not allow them
time to remove their belongings before commencing with the vandalism.

When The Witness visited the hostels yesterday, there were shoes, toys, beer bottles,
mattresses, curtains and pieces of furniture squashed under the debris of the roofs and
bricks that had caved in during the wrecking.

The hostel dwellers allege Mkhize is trying to chase away IFP supporters.

Mkhize’s bodyguards reportedly said that most of the residents are “tourists” in
Bruntville and they should go back to where they come from.

The residents claimed that the bodyguards threatened to shoot them if they did not move
from the hostels.

One of the residents said that most hostel dwellers are from the surrounding rural areas
and are staying in the hostel to be closer to their workplaces.

“However, [Mkhize’s bodyguards] told us to go back to our homes because they don’t
want us there.”

They told The Witness that the situation is tense and that politically linked violence is
brewing.

“Most of us are security guards who are issued with firearms at work. [The bodyguards]
have threatened to shoot and kill us and we might use our own work guns to defend
ourselves,” said one resident. They said that the government should act immediately to
put a stop to this.

Women residents said the hostel is not safe, adding that when there are parties in the
nearby township, there are revellers who come to the hostel and terrorise them.

“In December it gets worse. We are attacked every time there is a party in the township.
They (revellers) … break down our doors and beat us up.

“We usually call the police, but we get little assistance from them. We have resorted
running and hiding in the nearby bushes and trenches,” said a female hostel dweller.
The hostel dwellers also complained about the lack of service delivery provisions, saying
they don’t have access to water, toilets and electricity. They claimed that electricity was
shut off in 2007, and that for cooking, they resort to indoor fires.

Police spokeswoman Inspector Joey Jeevan said a delegation from the hostel told the police of the demolition incident and was advised to come forward and formally report the matter so that it can be investigated.

Mpofana Municipality mayor Mncedisi Mthethwa held a meeting with the hostel
residents on Wednesday. He said no resolution was taken by the municipality to have
the hostel demolished.

“Those who did this [demolition] are not acting on the council mandate and they must
be reported to the police,” said Mthethwa, adding that he was informed by residents that

Mkhize’s bodyguards were allegedly the demolishers.

An IFP councillor, Mthembeni Majola, said his party will organise a march in the next
few days to call for the demolition of the hostel to stop.

The ANC told The Witness yesterday that it will take steps against the demolishers. The
ANC secretary in the Moses Mabhida region, Supa Zuma, said the matter will be investigated as a matter of urgency.

Mkhize told The Witness on Monday that he is not behind the demolition.

Witness: Demolition – uMngeni gets court order; residents evicted

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=17407

Demolition: uMngeni gets court order; residents evicted
15 Dec 2008

Thando Mgaga

More than a hundred residents were left homeless after the uMngeni Municipality bulldozed their shacks to the ground at kwaKani informal settlement near the Cedara College yesterday.

Families with children — among them orphans in the care of neighbours — were left to fend for themselves in the rain.

They were left without blankets and food and the demolishers did not allow them to remove their belongings before bulldozing their shacks to the ground.

When The Witness visited the area, the homeless families had sought refuge in an abandoned four-room brick house near the informal settlement.

They said their pleas to have their belongings spared fell on deaf ears and they were told by the demolishers that the municipality had given them more than enough time to move.

One of the residents, Sibongile Mlaba, said the municipality asked them to vacate the area. “We asked [the municipality] to provide us with alternative accommodation or land and they refused, saying that we must just move,” said Mlaba.

Johnson Ngcobo said the shacks were “completely” destroyed.

“We don’t have anywhere else to go. We have small children and we are afraid that we might be raped and attacked by criminals,” said Fikile Mbatha.

Some of the residents claim they have been in the area for 13 years.

uMngeni municipal manager Dumisani Vilakazi said he could not answer why the shacks were demolished with furniture, food and belongings still inside, as he was not there during the evictions.

“They were warned before they moved to that place that they were not supposed to build there. I personally had two meetings with them and told them that. Because they did not respond positively to what we had told them, we had no choice but to approach the court, which ruled that they must be evicted. It was all done in terms of an eviction order of the high court,” said Vilakazi.

He said the demolition was a joint effort between the municipality with its security officials, the sheriff of the court and the police. He said the order did not require that any alternative shelter be provided for the illegal dwellers and dismissed claims that people have lived there for 13 years.

The Witness: 11 families evicted from New Hanover farm in rain by new owner

http://www.witness.co.za/index.php?showcontent&global[_id]=15199

11 families evicted from New Hanover farm in rain by new owner

23 Oct 2008
Thando Mgaga

ELEVEN families are homeless after they were evicted from the Slavko Vukelic Farm in New Hanover.

One of the evicted people, Bongiwe Mabaso, said they have lived on the farm for more than 10 years and the eviction took them by surprise.

She said they have been engaged in a battle to stay on the farm since 2006. Their lawyer was informed about the eviction earlier this week and has been instructed by the Land Affairs Department to oppose it.

Mabaso said they took their battle to court and after their last lawyer withdrew, they thought the matter had been put on hold and they would be summoned if it surfaced again.

“The new owner came with police and other people and told us to leave the farm because he had been granted a court order to evict us. We had no place to go and when we pleaded that we don’t have alternative accommodation and it’s raining, the police just said we must move out of the farm, destroying our food in the process,” said Mabaso.

Faniseni Mchunu (60) said he had lived on the farm since before New Hanover grew into the town it is today. He said they were evicted in pouring rain and given shelter in the town hall.
He said they are refusing to leave the farm as their family members are buried there.

Association For Rural Advancement (Afra) field worker, Thabo Manyathi, who brought the evictees food, said government has to step in because the eviction order was granted improperly and the owner ignored the plight of the people.

Their lawyer, Aubrey Ngcobo, said he is hoping to oppose the eviction in the Land Claims Court by Monday.
Mshwati municipal manager, Vincent Cebekhulu, said the municipality will continue to house the evictees at the town hall, and consult the Housing Department to establish what can be done to assist them as the municipality does not have houses for them.

Attempts to get comments from the farm owner proved unsuccessful.
thandom@witness.co.za

The Witness: Sick settlers suffer as landowner cuts water

Sick settlers suffer as landowner cuts water
02 Oct 2008
Thando Mgaga

Residents of Sakha informal settlement in Mkondeni are up in arms with
Mayor Zanele Hlatshwayo and their ward 37 councillor, Sandy Lyne, over
the slow pace of service delivery to the poor community.

The informal settlement was in the media spotlight in July last year
when “larney land-grabbers” came in 4x4s and tried to stake a claim on
“free land”.

Sakha community leader Nathi Zaca said that since then, Hlatshwayo and
Lyne have ignored invitations to listen to complaints about their basic
service needs.

He said they heeded Hlatshwayo’s call to form a committee to communicate
with the municipality.

“Since October last year, we have been trying to get the mayor and ward
councillor to speak to us about our problems, and get a report on what
has been decided about being allocated land to build homes for ourselves
and children”.

Zaca said the community are also in dire need of water and electricity.

He claimed that residents were without water for two days this week
because the landowner of the property switched off the water.

“We are suffering. When we reported the water outages to the
municipality, the response we got was that they cannot do anything to
help us because the water was cut from a private property.

We have sick people here and should they all die because of one
landowner?” said Zaca.

Attempts to get a comment from the mayor were unsuccessful. Lyne said
she has met the community on several occasions, but the mayor has never
been present. She said she made it clear to the residents that they are
on private land and council cannot help them.

thandom@witness.co.za