logo
EFF MP Sihle Lonzi grills Nkabane over secret SETA panel, ‘Is it your boyfriend?'

EFF MP Sihle Lonzi grills Nkabane over secret SETA panel, ‘Is it your boyfriend?'

IOL News3 days ago

EFF MP Sihle Lonzi questions the legitimacy of the panel that recommended SETA board appointments during a tense committee briefing last week on Friday
Image: Independent Newspapers Archives
EFF MP Sihle Lonzi has questioned Higher Education Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane who recommended the withdrawn Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETA) chairs, suggesting it could include 'her boyfriend or family members.'
The matter was brought before the Committee of Higher Education and Training on Friday where Nkabane faced sharp criticism from opposition MP's.
Nkabane repeatedly refused to disclose the names of members of the panel that recommended the now-withdrawn chairpersons of the SETAs.
This comes after Nkabane faced backlash over leaked appointments to SETA boards, which included several ANC-linked individuals, among them, former KwaZulu-Natal Premier Dr Nomusa Dube-Ncube and Buyambo Mantashe, son of ANC national chairperson and Mineral Resources Minister Gwede Mantashe.
Nkabane appeared before the committee last week on Friday after she rescinded the appointments in response to the public outcry.
Despite that, she insisted the process adhered to legal and governance standards.
'The integrity of the process was beyond scrutiny and reproach,' Nkabane said.
She told the Committee forHigher Education and Training on Friday that the panel had operated under the guidance of the King IV Report on Corporate Governance.
Nkabane said a dedicated structure to oversee nominations was recommended by the Auditor-General in 2020.
Video Player is loading.
Play Video
Play
Unmute
Current Time
0:00
/
Duration
-:-
Loaded :
0%
Stream Type LIVE
Seek to live, currently behind live
LIVE
Remaining Time
-
0:00
This is a modal window.
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.
Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan
Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque
Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps
Reset
restore all settings to the default values Done
Close Modal Dialog
End of dialog window.
Advertisement
Next
Stay
Close ✕
According to her, the department received 573 nominations, of which only 20 were recommended by an independent panel.
Nkabane emphasised that the panel members were reputable individuals who volunteered their services and did not act on behalf of the ministry.
'They don't claim to execute this responsibility on behalf of the minister,' she said.
However, when Democratic Alliance (DA) MP Letta Maseko asked her to name the panelists, Nkabane declined.
'There is no need for me to come and declare my volunteers, the people who assisted me voluntarily to execute my responsibilities,' she said.
'If something wrong happened, then hold accountable the person empowered by legislation, the minister, not them.'
Asked again, Nkabane said, 'I can't share the names. Whatever comes, the responsibility lies with the minister. I am not going to drag them...'
Umkhonto weSizwe Party MP Mnqobi Msezane said the panel's identity was a matter of public interest and accused the department of appointing 'ghost people.'
Meanwhile, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) MP Lonzi said he did not accept the minister's claim that the process was above board.
'We want to know who those people are,' Lonzi said, as he questioned the legitimacy of decisions made by the unknown group.
'Who are the profiles of this independent panel that you take so seriously, who told you who to put in the SETAs, NSFAS board, and university councils? Who are your advisers? Is it your mother? Is it your sister? Is it your friend? Is it your boyfriend? Is it your girlfriend?'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EFF remembers Edgar Lungu's resilience during Zambia's darkest hour
EFF remembers Edgar Lungu's resilience during Zambia's darkest hour

Eyewitness News

time19 minutes ago

  • Eyewitness News

EFF remembers Edgar Lungu's resilience during Zambia's darkest hour

JOHANNESBURG - The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) has joined the chorus in remembering the life of former Zambian President Edgar Lungu. Lungu died on Thursday at a Pretoria hospital, at the age of 68, after receiving medical treatment. The EFF has conveyed its condolences to the people of Zambia, the Patriotic Front political party and the family of former Zambian leader. The red berets say Lungu's rise to presidency came after he led Zambians through a challenging period marked by economic strain and political change. ALSO READ: Edgar Lungu, former Zambian president, dead at 68 The party has hailed Lungu for making strides in strengthening Zambia's international relations and promoting unity across political divides. Lungu served as Zambia's 6th president. His tenure started from 26 January 2015 and ended on 24 August 2021. The EFF has extended the party's sympathies to Lungu's wife, Esther, and their six children.

Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu: How the flighty have fallen as Shivambu slinks off for a duck
Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu: How the flighty have fallen as Shivambu slinks off for a duck

Daily Maverick

time19 minutes ago

  • Daily Maverick

Letter to Mahlamba Ndlopfu: How the flighty have fallen as Shivambu slinks off for a duck

Ah, Chief Dwasaho! As twilight settles over Mahlamba Ndlopfu, one imagines you peering out at the political pitch beyond your manicured lawns. My leader, the grand match of South African politics unfolds bizarrely. The latest wicket to tumble is that of Floyd Shivambu — once a fiery opening batsman of the so-called radical left — now sent back to the pavilion under clouds of disgrace. The crowd gasps as this former prodigy of the revolution is clean-bowled by fate. In a game of high stakes and even higher rhetoric, Shivambu's fall from grace has been nothing short of a dramatic reverse swing, catching even seasoned political analysts off guard. All things former: Floyd Shivambu's political innings There was a time when Shivambu strutted on to the field with all the confidence of a star player destined for centuries. He made his debut as a loud voice in the African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL) — a young lion roaring alongside Julius Malema until both were exiled for insubordination in 2012. Unfazed, Shivambu helped to found the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) in 2013, donning the iconic red beret as its deputy president and commissar for policy and political education. Those were heady days of revolution on the front foot: hurling firebrand slogans, envisioning nationalised mines and land expropriation without compensation, and rattling the establishment with every swing of their bats at the status quo. But politics is a game of glorious uncertainties. By 2024, sensing a change in pitch, Shivambu switched teams mid-match. Less than a year ago, he dramatically walked away from the EFF and cast his lot with a new side, Jacob Zuma's uMkhonto Wesizwe (MK) party. He switched sides from Malema's youthful rebels to Zuma's ageing pseudo-revolutionaries, a move that left many political observers gobsmacked. Overnight, Shivambu traded red overalls in Parliament for singing ' Umshini Wami ' under Zuma's wing. He proved that in politics, strange bedfellows are par for the course. He fancied himself at the crease as secretary-general of an outfit named after the ANC's old armed wing, humming liberation tunes and reviving comradeship and Struggle. It was to be a new innings under the patronage of uBaba kaDuduzane — the wily old master bowler Zuma himself. Shivambu hoped to prove his revolutionary fire still burned outside the EFF's stadium. For Malema and the EFF, this defection was the ultimate betrayal — the Red Beret turned his coat mid-tournament. Shivambu's misstep Alas, my leader, Shivambu's latest innings was cut short. In a dramatic middle-order collapse, MK's self-anointed captain, Zuma, axed Shivambu as MK party secretary-general this week. The official reason? A reckless shot outside the crease: a secret trip to Malawi to meet fugitive preacher Shepherd 'Profit' Bushiri. Shivambu made the move without so much as a nod to Captain Zuma. That misstep swung the pendulum against the rising uBaba star. He had fancied himself ready for the next Cricket World Cup — better known as the 2026 local government elections. The party regarded this as a grievous breach of discipline and image — a self-inflicted hit-wicket moment. As any cricket captain would, Zuma seized the chance to shuffle his batting order and perhaps please his daughter, 'Commander' Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, who had already voiced her displeasure. Shivambu is now reduced to a run-of-the-mill member of Parliament. How the minors have fallen! From star batsman to ice boy It's a humbling demotion — from star batsman to ice boy — for a man who once styled himself as a political heavyweight, an incarnation of Karl Marx. He trudges off with zero runs to his name in this short-lived innings — a proverbial golden duck on debut as SG. Shivambu was the party's unelected fifth secretary-general since its launch in 2023. The MK party treats its SGs like disposable wicketkeepers, swapping them out at the slightest fumble. In truth, the writing was on the wall before the umpire's finger went up. Duduzile had drawn the dagger first, and other MK cadres had long been dissatisfied with Shivambu's style of play. He was accused of trying to pad the team with his former EFF players and 'running the party his way' — a cardinal sin in a collective where ironically, Zuma is head coach and captain. Tensions reached a boiling point as even Shivambu's ally Mzwanele Manyi was dismissed as chief whip, and factions formed faster than a spinning ball on a cracked pitch. The once-celebrated recruit from the EFF found himself isolated on the crease, with no partners left to guard the other end. Ball-tampering scandal: The VBS overspill No account of Shivambu's career can ignore the VBS Mutual Bank scandal, that lingering shadow on his record. Think of it as a ball-tampering controversy that has doctored the swing of his political trajectory. Years ago, when VBS Bank was brazenly looted, it was alleged that Shivambu (via his brother) and his comrades in the EFF benefited illicitly from the spoils. The scandal, still echoing through inquiries and headlines, has been an albatross around his neck — a scuff on the ball of his revolutionary credentials. Some commentators didn't mince their words, declaring that Julius Malema and Floyd 'Fraud' Shivambu 'robbed a bank' and are destined for orange overalls behind bars. Pay back the money In October 2023, Parliament's Joint Committee on Ethics and Members' Interests found Shivambu guilty of breaching the Code of Ethical Conduct by failing to disclose R180,000 received in 2017 from his brother's company, Sgameka Projects, which was implicated in the VBS Mutual Bank scandal. As a result, the National Assembly imposed a sanction, docking nine days' salary from Shivambu. Thus, the whiff of VBS corruption clings to him like the odour of a tampered cricket ball, raising eyebrows every time he steps up to the political crease. It is the unspoken sledging from the opposition benches: 'Pay back the money!' Songs of the revolution — a lament for lost comradeship My leader, one can almost hear the haunting strains of ANC Struggle songs in the background as this saga unfolds. Once upon a time, men like Shivambu and his compatriots sang of unity and sacrifice — ' Senzeni na?' (What have we done?) when times grew dark, or ' Thina sizwe esimnyama ' as they vowed to overcome oppression. In those days, 'comrade' was a badge of honour, not a casual greeting. Elegy for fraud But today, our revolutionary anthems turn into elegies for a brotherhood betrayed. Shivambu's odyssey — from the young lion of Luthuli House to red-beret crusader of Winnie Madikizela Mandela House, to outcast in an outfit named for the Spear of the Nation — feels like a remix of the great Struggle songbook, but with jarring off-key notes. Do you recall the haunting refrain ' Hamba kahle, Mkhonto ' — Go well, Spear of the Nation — sung in honour of departing freedom fighters? Today it might as well be directed at Shivambu as he exits the stage, a fallen cadre carrying a sack of 'formers' on his backpack: former Youth League firebrand, former EFF deputy commander, former Red Beret founding member, former policy commissar, and now, former MK Party secretary-general. All things are former indeed. Dimmed lights, Trump style My leader, the stadium lights have dimmed on Floyd's revolutionary dreams, at least for now. Yet, hope springs eternal on the cricket pitch and in politricks. Even as he licks his open wounds on the sidelines, Shivambu might dream of a comeback in the next innings. Politics, after all, is a timeless Test match — fortunes can reverse with the swing of a single delivery. But for now, from your vantage point, my leader, you can sip your adult beverages and chuckle at the spectacle of it all. Even Julius Malema, one suspects, is grinning from the stands at his erstwhile lieutenant's fate — proof that those who abandon the Red Berets often do so at their peril. Is it cold outside the Winnie Mandela House? The enemy of your enemy has effectively bowled himself out. The once arrogant batsman has been caught out, stumped by his hubris and the guile of an older fox. The revolution's choir now sings a cautionary dirge for Shivambu. The ANC must be quietly pleased, its thorn removed by friendly fire. As the opposition implodes, you can watch the flames from Luthuli House, smiling as their factional feuds do your work for you. Till next week, my man. Send me to the Parliament winter Test matches. DM

Minister Nkabane responds after chewing gum backlash
Minister Nkabane responds after chewing gum backlash

The South African

time2 hours ago

  • The South African

Minister Nkabane responds after chewing gum backlash

Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Nobuhle Nkabane has come under fire for chewing bubble gum during a tense Portfolio Committee session last week. In a statement released and quickly deleted on the Department of Higher Education and Training's Facebook page, Nkabane responded to mounting criticism over her conduct. The incident took place during the 30 May 2025 committee meeting. Observers and MPs accused Nkabane of acting with 'disrespect' and showing a 'lack of seriousness' while addressing Parliament. 'I acknowledge that the situation could have been handled differently,' said Nkabane. She added that she had taken note of concerns raised by several stakeholders, including President Cyril Ramaphosa, who issued a public statement earlier on Wednesday. Critics singled out her behaviour during the meeting, particularly the moment she visibly chewed gum while speaking, as a symbol of disregard for parliamentary decorum. The backlash prompted growing calls for accountability and professionalism. Nkabane said she now wants to rebuild trust with Parliament. 'I intend to maintain a constructive, respectful, and professional working relationship with all Members of Parliament,' she said. She insisted she did not mean to 'evade accountability or undermine the decorum of Parliament.' She vowed to strengthen the relationship between her Ministry, the Department, and the Portfolio Committee. 'I will continue to lead with humility. I value the critical role of Parliament in providing oversight to ensure our sector delivers effectively for all South Africans,' she said Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store