
President addresses concerns about National Dialogue's price tag
It's been reported that the gathering will cost around R700-million.
Ramaphosa says the first convention is being funded from existing budgets within Nedlac and the Presidency.
This includes secretariat support, communications, and logistics.
He says all procurement will adhere to the Public Finance Management Act and Treasury regulations.
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eNCA
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Staggering R700 million price tag a put-off
JOHANNESBURG - The Thabo Mbeki Foundation has pulled out of the National Dialogue, citing the staggering R700-million price tag as a key reason. WATCH: Discussion | Concerns convention is symbolic, not substantive Beyond the hefty cost, the Foundation also raised questions about exactly how the funds would be spent. With the Convention still set to begin on Friday, there are more questions than answers at this stage. Sam Koma, a governance expert, unpacked this with eNCA.


Daily Maverick
3 hours ago
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IDT CEO Tebogo Malaka's mansion and the unpaid EPWP workers: key takeaways
A months-long Daily Maverick investigation exposes financial ties between suspended Independent Development Trust CEO Tebogo Malaka and an IDT contractor. We also shed light on a simmering scandal involving unpaid Expanded Public Works Programme workers. This, by all indications, is the story that Malaka so desperately hoped to quash. A contractor to the Independent Development Trust (IDT) paid at least R200,000 towards a new house in an upmarket residential estate currently being built for suspended IDT CEO Tebogo Malaka. Daily Maverick's months-long investigation identified two transfers from businessman Collen Mashawana towards the construction of Malaka's new house inside Gauteng's Waterfall Country Estate. At the time of the first transfer, Malaka was still firmly in her job as CEO, and the IDT was on the verge of appointing Mashawana's charitable foundation for an employment scheme funded by the government's Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP). Read the full investigation The Collen Mashawana Foundation (CMF) ended up getting by far the largest portion of the IDT's EPWP spend for the previous and current financial years, trumping more than 400 other nonprofits. The foundation was appointed to employ and manage nearly 1,800 EPWP workers across five provinces. The allocations shocked stakeholders familiar with the IDT's EPWP initiatives, seeing as the CMF has no track record in managing an employment scheme of this magnitude. Our investigation unearthed two alarming sets of developments that unfolded in the same timeframe. First, the CMF short-changed or failed to pay hundreds of its EPWP workers. Second, Collen Mashawana himself became directly involved in a R16-million project to build the IDT CEO's new house in the Waterfall Country Estate, acting as something of a project manager. Mashawana also made at least two payments towards Malaka's property. The EPWP workers' outstanding salaries, and Mashawana's simultaneous involvement in the Waterfall development, raises serious questions. Were the workers' hard-earned wages perhaps diverted to the IDT CEO's new mansion? The foundation has come out to strongly deny any impropriety. 'The Collen Mashawana Foundation (CMF) strongly refutes the misleading implications published in a recent article by the Daily Maverick, which seeks to connect the Foundation's implementation of the Expanded Public Works Program (EPWP) to alleged irregularities involving the suspended IDT CEO, Ms. Tebogo Malaka,' it said in a statement released on Monday, 11 August 2025. However, our investigation identified several transactions and related factors that raise alarm bells. Satellite images of Malaka's stand, coupled with WhatsApp correspondence and other records, helped us to craft a reliable timeline of progress at the building project. Thanks to our bundle of evidence, we know that all major works for the new house only kicked off after the IDT had transferred millions of rands to the CMF. The CMF, meanwhile, was not using these funds for its intended purpose, namely paying the EPWP workers their rightful salaries; Collen Mashawana made at least two payments towards Malaka's property, totalling R200,000. The payments were made through two different companies controlled by the businessman. Mashawana made the first payment in July 2024, while the IDT was still considering his foundation's EPWP bid. The businessman made the second known payment in April this year, shortly after the CMF had banked substantial payments from the IDT; and Mashawana appointed a company called Two Putswa Maeba Construction and Projects as the main contractor for Malaka's new house. Two Putswa had to pay for all manner of materials and services related to the project. The contractor on several occasions settled invoices shortly after the IDT transferred funds to Mashawana's foundation. In one instance, Two Putswa fell behind on its payments for leasing a construction container. It later settled the bill, the very next day after the CMF received R1.1-million from the IDT. As progress continued at Malaka's Waterfall property, the CMF's EPWP workers started taking the nonprofit and the IDT to task over the problems with their wages. To date, the IDT has transferred at least R23-million to the foundation, but much of this money was not used for its intended purpose. The alleged misappropriation of these funds is seemingly affirmed by a Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) probe. A group of more than 200 EPWP workers from Kgotsong in the Free State took the Collen Mashawana Foundation to the CCMA. The CCMA considered the group's evidence and in April this year ruled that the foundation had failed to pay them for five months. The CMF collectively owes this group nearly R1.7-million in outstanding salaries. To date, however, the foundation has failed to comply with the CCMA's decision, further fuelling the group's resentment and frustration. In all, the CMF had nearly 1,800 workers on its payroll for the IDT initiative. They were from Gauteng, Limpopo, North West, the Free State and KwaZulu-Natal. The group worked at rubbish dumps, cleaned streets, parks and other public spaces, among other tasks assigned to them. On average, the workers were supposed to earn about R1,700 per month. Daily Maverick also identified scores of workers from Limpopo and elsewhere in the Free State who received only small portions of their rightful salaries. In some instances, the CMF failed to pay the workers anything at all. Malaka chose not to respond to any of the queries we put to her. Collen Mashawana received a set of nearly twenty detailed queries but provided only a broad denial of any impropriety. 'It will not be appropriate for me to defend myself in the media on unsubstantiated and untested allegations,' said the businessman. DM This investigation was made possible by funding from the Henry Nxumalo Foundation, an independent nonprofit company that supports investigative journalism in South Africa and elsewhere on the continent. Some of the satellite images used for this investigation are from Airbus Space and Defence's Pléiades Neo satellite and were generously supplied to us by the company.

IOL News
3 hours ago
- IOL News
G20 Interfaith Forum: Archbishop Makgoba criticises government, declares 'Ubuntu is broken'
Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, during his address, appealed to President Cyril Ramaphosa and the government to take action on the five G20 action areas. Image: Theolin Tembo/Independent Newspapers Archbishop Thabo Makgoba said that 'Ubuntu is broken' when he delivered the keynote address at the G20 Interfaith Forum (IF20) on Monday in Cape Town, which saw several global voices committed to shaping inclusive and ethical policy coming together. The IF20 forum convenes religious leaders, civil society organisations, government officials, multilateral institutions, and scholars to explore collaborative solutions to pressing global challenges. The IF20 event is intended to reflect and reinforce South Africa's G20 Presidency theme: 'Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability.' The Cape Town event is intended as a catalyst for action, fostering partnerships that transcend borders, beliefs, and sectors. Makgoba, during his address, appealed to President Cyril Ramaphosa and the government to take action on the five G20 action areas. This included food security and poverty, economic and financial action, social cohesion as a foundation for peace, migration and refugee movements, human trafficking, and religious involvement, as first responders. 'IF20's continued work highlights extensive religious teaching and practices supporting policies and action to support those on the move, especially those who are most vulnerable,' he said. 'As South Africans, our appeal to our president, Mr Cyril Ramaphosa, and other government leaders is to prioritise these agenda points.' 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 ✕ 'At our recent colloquium, Bishop Sithembele Sipuka, President of the South African Council of Churches (SACC), emphasised that 'food security is not just about calories, it is about Ubuntu, and our interconnected humanity. When children die of malnutrition, while food rots in warehouses, when fertile land lies barren…when communities that once fed themselves have to depend on handouts, our Ubuntu is broken'." 'When government, business, and faith communities work together with mutual respect and shared responsibility, we then treat people as agents rather than objects,' Makgoba said. 'When we build systems that empower rather than create dependency, then we restore not just food security, but human dignity. 'Our appeal should be, firstly, to our government. Use the G20 platform to champion, not just emergency relief, but sustainable food systems that empower people. Learn from Brazil's success, but adapt solutions to our African context.' Makgoba said that this entails providing enough budget allocation for agriculture and addressing partnerships between the government and civil society. He said that the government often uses the approach of tackling the problem alone, "systematically excluding churches and faith communities from programme implementation, opting for isolation over collaboration". 'Faith communities have the organisational structure and unwavering commitment to provide social services, and advance the development that the government so desperately needs. We are present in every corner of the country, in cities and the most rural (and) remote areas, where government services barely reach,' Makgoba said. 'More importantly, we have deep personal connections with communities that most government officials cannot replicate. Instead of viewing faith communities as competitors or obstacles, the government should provide funding and support to leverage our existing infrastructure and community trust.' Makgoba urged business leaders to go beyond making donations and focus on partnering with communities to build sustainable livelihoods. He encouraged the faith leaders to focus on empowering people. 'We can either continue the cycle of dependency or choose the more challenging, but dignifying path of empowerment. Our people are ready for this change, the real question is, are we, as churches, and faith leaders, to lead them?' He also called out the political elites, and 'those close to power, who live in a luxury bubble of affluence, absorbing national resources' while the vulnerable struggle to survive. 'Pump resources into the life-enhancing programmes, and strengthen peacemaking efforts to stop violent conflicts…Our faith demands of us that worship should drive us from our knees, and send us out from our churches, mosques and temples to engage the world and ensure our Creator's intentions are fulfilled.'