logo
President authorises SIU to probe seven tenders in Mbombela

President authorises SIU to probe seven tenders in Mbombela

TimesLIVE05-05-2025

President Cyril Ramaphosa has signed a proclamation authorising the Special Investigating Unit (SIU) to investigate allegations of maladministration in Mbombela municipality's affairs and recover any losses the state suffered.
The SIU said on Monday the proclamation authorised it to investigate allegations of serious maladministration in connection with seven tenders.
These were:
1. Tender number PRE/040/14/MP for investigation and legal services;
2. Tender number DHS/112/15/MP relating to the installation of internal municipal civil engineering services, construction of low-cost reconstruction and development programme housing units and the provision of project management under the integrated residential development programme at Emjindini Extensions 5, 16, 17, 18 and 19.;
3. Tender number NLM-TS-003/2015/16 relating to engineering services;
4. Construction-related goods and services in respect of the R538 Hazyview to Numbi Gate turn-off project;
5. Bid number 26/2015 relating to the appointment of professional consultants for the establishment of the strategic programmes and projects support unit for the municipality;
6. Bid number 72/2017 relating to the turnkey energy efficiency and demand side management programme; and
7. Tender number 116/2018 relating to the implementation of the construction of Phase 1 of the Nsikazi North bulk water scheme.
'The SIU probe will examine whether the procurement and contracting were made in a manner that was not fair, competitive, transparent, equitable, cost-effective or in violation of applicable legislation, guidelines or instructions from the national or provincial Treasury,' SIU spokesperson Kaizer Kganyago said.
This included the municipality or state's unauthorised, irregular or wasteful expenditure.
'Furthermore, the SIU will seek to establish if there was any misappropriation of unidentified payments received by the municipality.'
Kganyago said the proclamation covered allegations of unlawful and improper conduct that occurred between February 16 2015 and May 2 this year.
Under the SIU Act, the SIU is also authorised to initiate a civil action in the high court or a special tribunal to address any wrongdoing identified during its investigation resulting from acts of corruption, fraud or maladministration.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dept of Social Development wants SRD grant extended beyond March 2026
Dept of Social Development wants SRD grant extended beyond March 2026

Eyewitness News

time3 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

Dept of Social Development wants SRD grant extended beyond March 2026

CAPE TOWN - The Department of Social Development wants the Social Relief of Distress (SRD) grant to be extended beyond March 2026, despite Treasury's intentions to stop the welfare initiative. The department said this was necessary while it finalised the basic income grant policy, which has been reviewed again by the department, despite frustrations from members of Parliament (MPs). ALSO READ: - Social Development says work on Basic Income Grant policy has been ongoing - Social Development Dept's delays in formulating a Basic Income Grant policy frustrate MPs - Treasury stands firm on unaffordability of continued extension of SRD grant Department officials and Minister Sisisi Tolashe briefed the social development portfolio committee on Wednesday on the progress made in finalising the long-awaited universal grant for all poor South Africans. The basic income grant policy has been in the making for several years and aims to provide monthly financial support to citizens who qualify. The Department of Social Development told Parliament that the policy was still in the making, and it could be a year before legislation on the policy was developed. Deputy Director-General Brenda Sibeko said until such time that the basic income grant policy was finalised, the SRD grant must be extended beyond March 2026. "So, we will also, in the process of doing the legislation, need the SRD grant to continue. So, in that regard, we will ask Treasury again to extend the SRD so that there isn't a break in that income support while the policy process is underway." She said the policy would also link beneficiaries with economic opportunities so that they did not just rely on the basic income grant.

Parliament's Standing Committee on Finance chair Maswanganyi says debate on fuel levy hike not over
Parliament's Standing Committee on Finance chair Maswanganyi says debate on fuel levy hike not over

Eyewitness News

time3 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

Parliament's Standing Committee on Finance chair Maswanganyi says debate on fuel levy hike not over

CAPE TOWN - Chairperson of Parliament's Standing Committee on Finance, Joe Maswanganyi, said the debate on increasing the fuel levy was far from over. The fuel levy had been left untouched for three years until Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana hiked it on Wednesday in efforts to meet the budget shortfall. On Wednesday, the uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Party and the Economic Freedom Fighters both rejected it as a revenue proposal in the 2025 budget when the finance committee met to adopt its report on the fiscal framework, in preparation for next week's vote in the National Assembly. ALSO READ: • EFF hellbent on having fuel levy hike scrapped, despite losing legal bid • Godongwana weighed his options before deciding to hike fuel levy: Mashatile • Treasury defends fuel levy increase Maswanganyi has committed to further discussions on the matter. "We had a very lengthy debate about this in 2022. We will look at that in the next quarter when we have Treasury. We will also bring the Department of Energy on board to discuss this matter and see what can be done moving forward. So, we are not dismissing what you are raising Honourable Moatwe, and Honourable Molefe." Meanwhile, ActionSA's Alan Beesley said that given the widespread financial mismanagement at the Road Accident Fund, which is largely funded by the fuel levy, it should be scrapped on that basis alone. "The RAF collects R50 billion of taxpayers' hard-pressed money. It's a cesspool of corruption and incompetence. It has an adverse audit report. The CEO should be fired. The board should be fired, and it's just sad that we are taking money from hard-pressed taxpayers, giving it to the RAF and that money is literally going down the drain."

Ghost workers drain billions from public funds
Ghost workers drain billions from public funds

The Citizen

time5 hours ago

  • The Citizen

Ghost workers drain billions from public funds

Ghost employees are being paid with taxpayer money, costing South Africa billions. This corruption must be rooted out with national audits and criminal prosecutions. The biggest problem facing public administration in South Africa – and the biggest opportunity for looters – is the lack of financial controls and even basic information on the government workforce. That is why it appears to have been a lucrative scam to create 'ghost workers' and then divert their salaries into the thieves' wallets. With a government salary bill of nearly R800 billion in this financial year – and a further R85 billion which is earmarked for employees in state-owned enterprises – the civil service is one fat cow waiting to be milked by the unscrupulous. Estimates are that there are probably tens of thousands of these bogus workers being paid like clockwork with taxpayer money… and that money, which probably runs into the billions, is what should be used for good works, development or even just to keep people from starving. The scale of the actual and possible looting is eyewatering. ALSO READ: How many ghost workers are there in government? The elimination of ghost workers at the Passenger Rail Agency of SA (Prasa) alone saved it R200 million. The Association of Certified Fraud Examiners estimates that ghost employees account for 8% of occupational fraud cases worldwide and experts believe this percentage could be even higher in South Africa, especially in government ranks, because of the lack of control and accountability. Other than Prasa, multiple cases of ghost workers have been revealed in sectors ranging from municipalities to government departments at provincial and national level. It is to be welcomed that President Cyril Ramaphosa has ordered the Special Investigating Unit to probe the ghost worker problem at Prasa… but it must go much further than that. Government directors-general must be told to audit their areas and if discrepancies are found, they must be dealt with. ALSO READ: More than R140 million in salaries paid to suspended government employees Anyone involved in these scams must be prosecuted and locked up because this is economic terrorism, plain and simple.

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