logo
Parties support Nkabane's education vote, staying out of ANC/DA spat

Parties support Nkabane's education vote, staying out of ANC/DA spat

The Herald04-07-2025
The DA was warned against diverting attention away from the crucial matters of the higher education sector, with parties saying they refuse to be "swindled" into the DA's spat with the ANC.
This follows a recent announcement that the DA intends to boycott the budget votes in departments led by controversial ANC ministers such as Dr Nobuhle Nkabane and Thembi Simelane, who leads human settlements. The DA has called for their axing.
The fury of the GNU's second-biggest party was prompted by the ousting of their former deputy minister of trade, industry and competition, Andrew Whitfield, last week.
However, parties say they will not allow the budget vote to stand in the way of the department's ability to continue with its functions.
EFF MP Sihle Lonzi led the charge, saying that while they do not see eye to eye with Nkabane, they will not be hoodwinked by GNU's trouble in paradise.
'We are perplexed that the DA only discovered corruption when their deputy minister was fired. Before the firing, they were singing praises about the GNU, today they want to behave like an opposition. The people of South Africa are not stupid and can see through your lies. We are not going to waste time on this fake fight between the DA and the ANC.
'The DA will vote for this budget which funds each and every department, including the department of higher education and human settlements. The DA's narrative is a deliberate distortion at best and sheer ignorance at worst. The EFF has been at the forefront of confronting the crisis at higher education even when those who are making the most noise now stood on the sidelines.'
The highly anticipated higher education budget vote took place in the mini plenary of the National Assembly on Thursday.
Lonzi told the plenary the EFF will not fall for the propaganda of the DA that it can support certain budgets and not other departments, clarifying that the DA's stance is not going to be effective.
'There are four key budget votes in parliament. The first is the fiscal framework and revenue proposals which gives budget bills the blueprint and sets the economic policy direction, which the DA voted in support of.
"The second is the division of revenue bill which deals with the appropriation of national and provincial government, the DA voted in support and it passed.
"We are now dealing with the appropriations bill which allocates funds to government departments and programmes — the DA cannot cherry pick. Voting for the appropriation bill means approving the entire budget inclusive of all the departments.'
Lonzi gave the minister seven steps to turn around the embattled education sector, which included the 'fixing' of NSFAS or complete removal of the controversial institution.
'You must rescue higher education from the collapse. There should be no reason NSFAS still struggles to pay students. We have about 19-million people on SASSA and an additional 9-million people receiving the R350 grant every single month. NSFAS only deals with an odd one-million students, why is there no efficient payment system that will pay students, institutions and accommodation directly?'
He added that the minister ought to blacklist corrupt board members.
'You must clean up the SETAs. You must blacklist corrupt board members and CEOs, not this thing you are doing now where when someone is suspended in one SETA, you take them [into] another SETA,' he said.
DA MP Karabo Khakhau who led the charge against Nkabane said she was not surprised by Nkabane's actions, saying that it is a result of the culture of the political party that has deployed her.
'To them, corruption is their daily bread. Living in a corruption-free South Africa is a threat against the very core of their existence. Unlike the other political parties who have today pledged their support to this budget under Nkabane, the DA has not forgotten about the people of this country.
'Our loyalty remains to nothing but the people. South Africa can count on the DA to fight for them and for justice against corruption. The real enemy of progress against young people is Nkabane - it is the ANC for protecting her and corruption, it is President Ramaphosa for refusing to fire her, it is the political parties that think R142bn is safe in the hands of Dr Nkabane.'
She told Nkabane that she should voluntarily vacate office if she feels strongly about serving the young people of this country.
'Committing fraud under statutory offence under section 26 of the Powers, Privileges and Immunities of Parliament Act is not only spitting on the graves of the forefathers of this democracy, but it is spitting in the faces if the young people whom you've failed to lead. It is a spit in the face of your DHET staff that you have sacrificed at the altar of your own protection.
'You said that you are dedicating this budget to the memory of the fallen heroes and heroines of the PSET sector. So I dare you, do the right thing in honour of them and resign! Detox the department of the toxicity of your poor leadership, arrogance, effective allergy to honesty and commitment to no-one but yourself. You don't need to wait for President Ramaphosa to fire you, if you mean it that you are a servant of the leadership of the people, serve and be honest and resign.'
Build One South Africa's Mmusi Maimane argued that the sector had bigger problems, adding that the starting point was to clear the air around Nkabane's alleged wrongdoing.
'On leadership, we can debate whether this is the right minister or not the right minister. The issue of whether the minister misled parliament needs to be brought to a parliamentary committee and an investigation must be sought so we can get to the bottom of this. It's not a violation of anyone's feelings, it's about a constitutional obligation which must be followed.'
He added that the bigger picture is to understand that the ambition of freedom could not be delinked to the sector overseen by Nkabane.
'You cannot delink the ambition of freedom from the ambition of higher education. We focused on the intrinsic nature of education but we've never linked it to our economic outputs. When we derive a plan for what South Africa needs to look like in the future, we become clear about the kind of graduates that we want to produce.
'This department progressively oversees the number of black students declining who go into higher education, but students who are Asian and Indian are increasing. It tells you that our empowerment story has been delinked from higher education.'
He urged the ministry to prioritise access to higher education to fully commit to the transformation of the country.
'From a capacity point of view, it's clear that infrastructure build in higher education is poor. We are talking about a shortage of 500,000 beds in this country. If we are going to see the doors of learning open, as is the ambition, we need to fund the capacity thereof.
'It's now common cause that NSFAS is not an efficient institution for managing how many students we want to get in. It's either we reform NSFAS or we shut out the middle man.'
Rise Mzansi's Makashule Gana told the committee that he refuses to take part in the scandal and spectacle that has brought attention to the ministry.
'Education, especially higher education, is not a luxury, it is a path out of poverty and is the foundation of a prosperous nation. The department's R142bn budget is substantial but not enough, because our crisis is not just funding — its spatial, access, and a system that is failing the poor.
"Nowhere is that failure more glaring than in NSFAS. I'm a product of it, many of us are, but what we see today is heartbreaking because hyenas and tenderpreneurs are circling what should be a lifeline for our students. That R95bn for NSFAS has to go to students, not middlemen.'
Despite the minister conceding that there is a R1.4bn deficit in the universities' budget, she vowed that the NSFAS budget would 'not be sufficient to meet the growing demand for access to higher education". NSFAS funding sits at R48.7bn this year, with further increases planned in the coming years.
Nkabane's budget covered key higher education sectors, detailing that TVET colleges are to receive R14bn, up from R13.1bn last year.
The combined allocation for Sector Education and Training Authorities and the National Skills Fund is R26bn. Meanwhile, university education rises from R91.7bn in 2024 to R96bn this year alone.
Nkabane said he will not dignify direct attacks and will focus on the task at hand: serving the people of South Africa.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Two men arrested in connection with KwaZulu-Natal political killings
Two men arrested in connection with KwaZulu-Natal political killings

IOL News

time41 minutes ago

  • IOL News

Two men arrested in connection with KwaZulu-Natal political killings

Councillor Nhlalayenza Ndlovu, the DA's Chief Whip in Umgeni, was gunned down at his home. Image: Supplied Two men who were arrested by the SAPS' KwaZulu-Natal Political Killings Task Team in connection with the murder of DA Councillor Nhlalayenza Ndlovu appeared in Howick Magistrate's Court yesterday. Their arrests came just two days after the unit arrested a former Municipal Manager in connection with the killing of the former ANC Youth League Secretary General, Sindiso Magaqa. One of the suspects arrested in the Ndlovu matter was Amanxamalala Traditional Authority's Inkosi Simphiwe Zuma, who is related to the former and current Umkhonto WeSizwe party President Jacob Zuma. Zuma was arrested alongside Thabo Mathonsi-Chonco. Both Zuma and Mathonsi-Chonco were out on bail for a separate murder case. Although the latest charges against Inkosi Zuma remain unclear, Mathonsi-Chonco was accused of conspiracy to commit murder and the murder of Ndlovu on December 23, 2023. Court A at the courthouse was filled with DA members, Inkosi Zuma's supporters, and members of the public. Another accused in the matter, Zwelithini Buthelezi, was not present. A source informed the Daily News that Buthelezi's charges were withdrawn on July 29 after he agreed to testify for the National Prosecuting Authority as a Section 204 witness. Inkosi Zuma and Buthelezi are also facing another murder charge for killing Zuma's head of izinduna, Qalokunye Zuma, on January 23, 2023. In that matter, Inkosi was granted R25,000 bail after his arrest on June 13; however, Buthelezi had already been denied bail in Ndlovu's murder case. He was arrested for Ndlovu's murder almost a month after being freed on bail from holding cells by Impendle Magistrate's Court in connection with Qalokunye Zuma's murder. 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 ✕ Ad loading During Thursday's court appearance, the Howick court only dealt with Mathonsi-Chonco, who wanted to be transferred from Westville Prison in Durban to Pietermaritzburg's New Prison. His lawyer, Nkomo, who refused to divulge his first name, stated that his client wished to be transferred to Pietermaritzburg due to ill health and that the city fell within the jurisdiction of the Howick court. However, Prosecutor Advocate Elvis Gcweka rejected the request, citing concerns that the accused might collude with Buthelezi, who was being held in Pietermaritzburg. Magistrate Ntini rejected Mathonsi-Chonco's request, stating, 'As the State has its fears, I don't see the problem in keeping the accused at Westville. If he is unwell, he can get medical treatment while kept in Westville.' At the time of his death, Ndlovu was deployed to the Umgeni Local Municipality. On Monday, the team arrested the 55-year-old former senior official at the Umzimkhulu Local Municipality in Malvern, Durban, regarding Magaqa's death DAILY NEWS

Mashatile fined R10,000 over Liebenberg diamond gift to wife
Mashatile fined R10,000 over Liebenberg diamond gift to wife

TimesLIVE

time41 minutes ago

  • TimesLIVE

Mashatile fined R10,000 over Liebenberg diamond gift to wife

Deputy President Paul Mashatile has been fined R10,000 for failing to declare a diamond gift his wife Humile received from a controversial businessman Louis Liebenberg in 2023. Mashatile said at the time that the gift was unsolicited and that his wife would take the precious stone back. This could now see Mashatile being the first sitting deputy president to suffer the public humiliation of being rebuked by the National Assembly for his questionable ethical conduct. Parliament's joint committee on ethics and members' interests has recommended that the National Assembly reprimands Mashatile and imposes a R10,000 fine on him 'for his failure to declare a gift to his wife in the confidential part of his financial and registrable interests register'. The fine comes in the wake of a controversy about a Constantia mansion, on the slopes of the Table Mountain, that Mashatile declared in parliament last Friday. Reports suggested that Mashatile had declared the almost R30m house as his own, but he has since said all he did was to declare the palatial retreat as the place he lived whenever he was in Cape Town. Mashatile maintained that the mansion was a family home bought by his son-in-law. 'Look, people must read. That's just one of the first things you must learn in life. There's nothing in parliament that I said a house (in Constantia). I said I live there. That house is owned by my son I law. It's a very simple thing to read, so what's the problem?' Mashatile told the SABC on Thursday. 'I don't use government money, there's no government money in those houses, so what are you looking for, there's no government money in that house, so I don't know what's your problem. It's a private home; it's owned by the family ... so how does government come in?' The joint ethics committee probed Mashatile over the Liebenberg diamond after receiving a complaint from the DA in March 2025. DA chief whip George Michalakis at the time alleged that Mashatile had breached the code requiring MPs to disclose gifts received by their immediate family in the confidential part of the register of members' interests. 'Following consideration of the complaint and perusal of the confidential part of the Deputy President's disclosed interests, the committee noted that the gift in question (a diamond from Mr Louis Liebenberg) was not disclosed,' the committee said. 'While the committee noted the member's response, among others, that he was waiting for the appraisal of the diamond to determine its value before a declaration was made and that he has since surrendered the gift to the National Prosecuting Authority, the committee contended that ethical behaviour required that the gift be declared, with the value disclosed at a later stage.' Reacting to committee's damning findings against Mashatile on Thursday, Michalakis said the nature of the relationship between Mashatile and Liebenberg remained unclear. 'The DA welcomes the guilty finding of the parliamentary joint ethics committee against Deputy President Paul Mashatile, for failing to disclose a diamond gifted to his wife by alleged fraudster Louis Liebenberg. 'We also note the sanction of a reprimand and R10,000 fine. This follows a complaint I laid with the committee on March 5 2025,' he said. 'The deputy president has since confirmed that the diamond was handed over to the National Prosecuting Authority. However, the ethics report raises more questions than answers, and the DA will submit parliamentary questions in this regard.' Michalakis said it was worrying that Mashatile was 'so careless' in his failure to disclose his assets as required. 'These failures give rise to serious concerns as to why the deputy president continuously fails to declare assets transparently and ethically, as well as what other assets the deputy president holds that have not yet been declared,' he said. 'South Africans deserve transparency from their deputy president, remunerated with public money, about the assets he acquires by virtue of the office he holds.' TimesLIVE

ANC NEC meeting to discuss local government elections and GNU
ANC NEC meeting to discuss local government elections and GNU

The Citizen

time41 minutes ago

  • The Citizen

ANC NEC meeting to discuss local government elections and GNU

The stability of the GNU will also be on the agenda at the NEC meeting. The ANC national executive committee (NEC) is scheduled to deliberate over the weekend on various issues, including discussing strategy on how to tackle the upcoming 2026 local government elections. Without a deep elaboration, an ANC source said the agenda would be full of matters of national and international importance. The source indicated that the pressure of increased tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump and the recognition of the Palestinian State will feature prominently on the NEC agenda. Poor election results The ANC is yet to recover from the May 2024 national election, where it received a paltry 40%, which forced it to cobble together a government of national unity (GNU) with at least 10 former opposition political parties. The loss of the parliamentary majority has the party searching for solutions to redirect the attention of disgruntled voters in its favour, as citizens seek alternatives after three decades of unmet promises by the ruling party. ALSO READ: Why the ANC remains a safe haven for corruption The party is faced with multiple crises. It had to shelve the NEC meeting recently amid an electoral loss in a Western Cape by-election. It also had to attend to a new crisis surrounding the suspension of Police Minister Senzo Mchunu, after KwaZulu-Natal provincial police commissioner Lt-Gen Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi accused him of interfering with criminal investigations. The allegations resulted in President Cyril Ramaphosa appointing a judicial commission of inquiry, chaired by Acting Deputy Chief Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga, to probe the allegations of corruption in the criminal justice system. Stability of the GNU The stability of the GNU is another issue that causes sleepless nights for President Cyril Ramaphosa, as the DA continues to challenge some of the ANC's decisions. Unity within the GNU was tested once more when the DA threatened to rock the boat after the president fired the DA's Andrew Whitfield as deputy minister of trade, industry and competition in June. ALSO READ: Is GNU to blame for Powell's resignation as DA's international relations spokesperson? The ANC is also confronted by a possible split of its votes in future elections after the SACP decided to contest the 2026 local polls on its own. The SACP has not yet shown signs of reversing its decision despite increasing criticism from within the tripartite alliance. The NEC, to sit from Friday until Monday, will also evaluate its local government intervention strategy to improve service delivery. This entails undertaking a review of the 1998 Local Government White Paper to enhance the effectiveness of local government. ANC gains So far, its gains are the stabilisation of the national grid, with a 70% energy availability factor, representing a 48% improvement since 2023. 'Our work includes addressing the perennial problem of load reduction. The people have spoken, we listened, and acted,' a senior party source said. South Africa was also acknowledged for building social protection, achieving the sustainable development goals and curbing illicit capital flows as recognised by the G20 Skukuza Declaration. 'We go to the NEC meeting buoyed by the declaration of the Liberation Movement Summit which committed the liberation movements to the service of the people. The ANC will continue with its agenda of building a better Africa and a better world for a peaceful global order and pursuing new ventures in the space of bilateral relations and inclusive multilateralism. This geo-political shift presents plenty of opportunities for economic growth, prosperity and new partnerships,' the ANC member said. NOW READ: Liberation movements fighting for survival and new injustices

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store