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Malema suspended for five years

ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema had to “vacate his position”, the party’s national disciplinary committee said on Thursday.

“The respondent shall vacate his position as the president of the ANC Youth League,” said chairman Derek Hanekom in Johannesburg.

Malema was suspended for an effective five years.

“Malema damaged the standing of the ANC and South Africa’s international reputation,” said Hanekom.

Discipline in the ANC was “non-negotiable”, he said.

“Discipline is non-negotiable and it must be enforced,” he told reporters at Luthuli House in Johannesburg, ahead of an announcement about the fate of African National Congress Youth League president Julius Malema.

He said the ANC’s National General Council (NGC) in September 2010 directed that it was crucial that its members were disciplined.

It was “incumbent” for the disciplinary committee to “observe” the NGC resolutions.

“There should be no confusing signals from leadership on matters of discipline,” said Hanekom, adding that the proper process was followed in the disciplinary hearing of ANC Youth League president Julius Malema.

“The disciplinary process was properly initiated and proper process was followed,” he said.

However, Hanekom said the start of the hearings in August was marred by “unprecedented violence” by Malema supporters. He continued to say the ANC Youth League’s autonomy was “qualified”.

Hanekom said the argument that the African National Congress Youth League was independent of the ANC was incorrect.

The ANCYL enjoyed a “degree of organisational autonomy”, but was not independent of the ANC.

The ANCYL existed for the sole benefit of the ANC.

The ANCYL’s constitution should not be in conflict with the ANC’s constitution, said Hanekom.

Credit to: Sapa and Independent Online

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ANC to make radical municipal changes

The ANC, in a desperate bid to arrest the decline in its support, plans to make radical changes in the municipalities.

In the coming weeks, the ruling party will introduce measures that will make mayors, municipal managers and other senior officials more accountable, as members of parliament and of provincial legislatures are.

The decision comes in the wake of last week’s local government elections in which the ANC’s support declined from about 66% in the 2006 elections, to about 62%.

Its rival, the DA, has enjoyed an increase in its support, from about 16% in 2006 to about 24% last week.

The municipal reforms are part of the ruling party’s municipal turnaround strategy. Party spokesman Jackson Mthembu said they would be implemented “as soon as possible”, in an effort to deliver services “faster and more efficiently”.

The move, said Mthembu, would help the ANC arrest the gradual erosion of its support by opposition parties.

The municipal turnaround strategy was conceived in 2009 by Co-operative Governance Minister Sicelo Shiceka in an attempt to revive failing municipalities.

“Our showing in the recent polls has spurred us into action. But we had already started working on the turnaround strategy.

“Even before the elections, we had started showing concerns about the performance of some councils. We didn’t bury our heads in the sand when our people were not satisfied with services. When people vote you into office, you owe it to them to deliver faster and more efficiently.

“We want to implement [the measures] as soon as possible so that people will realise that their vote is not misplaced,” Mthembu said.

The mechanisms being considered include:
•    Introducing municipal bodies to which mayors and their executives, including the mayoral committee, will have to account;
•    Forcing municipalities to be monitored and evaluated, as are all national and provincial government departments, by Minister in the Presidency Collins Chabane;
•    Monitoring councillors at a political level, by making them accountable to party branches, which, will in turn account to subregions. Subregions will account to regions, and the regions their province and;
•    Asking the national Treasury to reallocate unspent municipal budgets.

The ANC, Mthembu said, could not return money to the Treasury while people lacked services.

“Mayors have both legislative and executive powers – and these need to be separated.

“Some sections of a council must look into the main work of the mayor and the executive.

The council must be able to sit on its own without the mayor and the executive,” Mthembu said.

He said the ANC’s national executive committee will this weekend discuss the outcome of the elections, and evaluate the party’s performance and the way forward.

“We plan to implement these [reforms] as soon as possible. You will need a legal framework to implement some of them,” he said.

Independent political analyst Daniel Silk said that all councillors, particularly those from the ANC, will be under “tremendous pressure” to deliver.

“South Africans will be more vigilant and more aggressive in demanding services. The ANC will have to be more responsive to the needs of the people.

“The defining feature of the next five years will be that South Africans will become more vocal in their criticism of the ANC, even those who voted for it.

“ANC councillors are in for a rough, tough time – otherwise they will see an increased erosion of their support.”

Silk said the monitoring and evaluation of performance at municipal level would mean nothing if the administration failed to appoint skilled and talented people.

“It’s all about finding the right skills. Chabane has been there but we haven’t seen much from him.”

ANC president Jacob Zuma, whose authority will be tested next year when his party holds its elective conference, has promised to act against public officials who fail to deliver.

His tenure will largely depend on the ANC halting the slide in its support, and winning back support in the tripartite alliance, especially that of unions federation Cosatu.

Mayors are to be named this week and Zuma will have to explain to the party’s Women’s League why women have been overlooked for top posts in metro councils.

Credit to: Times Live

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Bumpy road ahead for Zuma as ANC loses support

Jacob Zuma’s leadership of the African National Congress (ANC) was in the spotlight yesterday as his party lost support in major centres while the Democratic Alliance’s (DA) support surged.

By 10pm last night, the DA was enjoying 24,1% support countrywide, up from 15% in the previous municipal poll. Its performance in several black townships across the country suggests it is being accepted by black voters.

The DA’s support base is now about one in four South Africans, which — given that only 9,2% of South Africans are white — will go a long way in backing its claim it is being accepted by black voters.

The DA’s growth, largely at the expense of the ANC, may make Zuma’s chances of re-election as the president of the ANC difficult. The party will hold leadership elections next year.

These elections indicate that SA may be moving towards a two- party dominant system.

The National Freedom Party (NFP), launched three months ago, made inroads in Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) strongholds in KwaZulu-Natal. By last night, the NFP had gained two municipalities from the IFP, from which it broke away.

The Congress of the People (COPE) had captured 2,2% of the vote . But the African Christian Democratic Party had won only 20 seats based on the votes counted. Independent councillors won 83 seats across SA.

The ANC seemed to be suffering from a punishment vote, with its traditional black supporters voting against it.

The party’s policy head, Jeff Radebe, conceded last night that the DA was the growth party in these elections. He said the ANC needed to “go back to the drawing board to see what is happening”.

“One of the issues is that some people changed the candidates chosen by the communities,” Radebe said.

He said, however, that the DA’s growth should not be exaggerated because the ANC had retained its metros. “There have been challenges and the ANC will attend to those challenges.”

The DA increased the number of councils it controls with a clear majority, from six before the elections to 17.

The Cape metro vote was still outstanding at 10pm last night.

The number of municipalities the DA would govern is expected to increase as the party is expected to form coalitions in areas where there was no outright winner, and in hung municipalities.

It has made inroads in ANC- controlled townships. While the votes it received were insufficient to change control, they were an indication of a significant shift. The party got votes in Soweto’s middle-class Pimville and Protea South areas.

In an upset, the DA also won ward 32 in Johannesburg from the ANC. Ward 32 includes Buccleuch and part of Alexandra — an ANC stronghold, and once home to Arts and Culture Minister Paul Mashatile and Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe .

In the Eastern Cape, the DA increased its number of councillors in the Nelson Mandela Bay metro, where the ANC scraped through with 51% of the vote.

The ANC has 61 seats out of 120 in the metro. That means that if only one ANC councillor is absent from a council meeting, the party will not be able to pass bylaws without opposition support.

In Port Elizabeth’s Walmer township, the DA also registered an increased number of votes.

In the Transkei, the DA won wards in Mthatha, Port St Johns and Lusikisiki. Most significantly, it won a ward in Nguza Hill (Flagstaff), the rural town controversially put on the map by Co- operative Governance Minister Sicelo Shiceka when he diverted its only tarred road to the house he is building for his mother.

In East London the DA took two wards from the ANC — including Gompo Town (Duncan Village) and Southernwood, both of which have few white voters.

Political analyst Mcebisi Ndletyana said the DA was seen as a white-dominated party, and its performance at the polls this week could possibly “shake that monkey out of its bag”.

The official opposition increased its grip on the Western Cape by winning 13 municipalities outright. By using its record in the handful of municipalities and single metro it controlled before the poll, the DA succeeded in making service delivery — and not race — the central theme of its election campaign.

A key result for the DA was its retention of control of the Midvaal council in Gauteng, with an increased majority — after the ANC threw everything into winning the municipality back.

It was expected the DA’s majority in Cape Town would be reduced, but DA insiders were confident the party would win the metro outright. The alliance between the DA and the Independent Democrats (ID) also appeared to have worked, with the DA retaining its areas and ID strongholds. Clearly the DA and ID marriage, with Patricia de Lille as the mayoral candidate, attracted large parts of the coloured vote.

Many of these voters would have been mindful of the declaration by then labour director-general Jimmy Manyi (now chief government spokesman) that there was an overconcentration of coloureds in the Western Cape and the subsequent accusation by ANC heavyweight Trevor Manuel that Manyi was a racist in the mould of Hendrik Verwoerd.

The DA also wrested several municipalities in the province from the ANC: Breede River, Saldanha Bay, Knysna and George — which would not have been possible without support from all races. James Selfe, chairman of the DA’s federal executive, said a significant number of wards had been won from the ANC across SA, and this could not have been achieved without black support, which had more than trebled since the previous election.

Facing defeat in the Cape Town ANC mayoral race, ANC candidate Tony Ehrenreich last night said he believed the ANC’s score would grow as counting continued on the Cape Flats, but conceded the party had failed to win coloured voters away from the DA.

“I don’t think we were going to be able to turn around traditional support to other parties so quickly,” he said, adding that people were still voting according to “apartheid faultlines” in the province.

“Coloured areas voted for the DA.

“So that should tell you that the people feel scared and more secure with people who had traditionally given coloureds a better deal.”

He conceded government spokesman Jimmy Manyi’s controversial comments that there was “an oversupply of coloureds” in the Western Cape, may have harmed the ANC’s chances.

Ehrenreich said he did not regret refusing to run a campaign that targeted specific race groups.

“I’m not going to be pandering to that type of racial division.”

Credit to: Business Day and Sapa

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Voting results almost completed

The Independent Electoral Commission had completed results for 95.1% of the country’s voting districts by 07:30 on Friday.

Counting in the North West and Northern Cape was finished.

The North West went to the ANC with 1.8 million votes (74.99%), followed by the Democratic Alliance, with 395 648 votes (16.14%).

The Northern Cape also saw the ANC win the race, obtaining 677 438 votes (63.57%), again followed by the DA with 237 315 votes (22.27%).

Nationally the ANC continued to dominate the leader board after South Africa’s fourth post-democracy local election.

By 07:00, the ANC’s share of the total national vote stood at 20.5 million (63.51%), with the Democratic Alliance at seven million (22.26%).

Seat calculations were 76.26% complete, with 212 seats of a total 278 allocated.

The province with the largest number of seats to be calculated was KwaZulu-Natal, with 25 municipalities left.

In Limpopo 15 seats still had to be allocated, followed by the Eastern Cape and the Free State with 10 each, Gauteng with three and Mpumalanga with two.

Credit to: News 24 and Sapa

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ANC embarrased about Free State open toilets

The African National Congress (ANC) plans to crack the whip on its Free State leaders who did not inform the party that the Moqhaka municipality — which includes Kroonstad — had built open toilets, secretary-general Gwede Mantashe said on Friday.

Mantashe said the local government elections had served to remind the party of the need to resuscitate the debate on whether all the three spheres of government should be retained as they are. Many smaller municipalities were burdened with a broad range of duties but were unable to raise revenue, he said.

Last week, the ANC was embarrassed by news of unenclosed toilets built by a municipality it controls. The revelations emerged at a time when the party was taking the Democratic Alliance to task for its open toilets in Cape Town.

Mantashe said the ANC was let down by those running the party in the Fezile Dabi region.

A disciplinary inquiry would be held, he said. Blaming Free State local government MEC Mamiki Qabathe for the toilet saga, he said she should have known about the toilets.

Amid further revelations that a company owned by Moqhaka mayor Mantebu Mokgosi was involved in the erection of the toilets, Mantashe said: “That is even worse. That is scandalous…. If you ask me, you should never do business with the company you are in.”

Officials and politicians had to be banned from doing business with the bodies they were part of. But he did not think a law was necessary to enforce this.

“Political ethics cannot be legislated. It is a function of consciousness. If you loot, there is something wrong with your consciousness … something is rotten with your consciousness,” he said.

Mantashe echoed Congress of South African Trade Unions general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi’s call last week for the debate on the levels of government to be reopened. Vavi said provincial governments were blocking the fast delivery of services, and should be done away with in order to embolden municipalities.

The ANC has been re-evaluating the three tiers of government. A conference in December recommended that a presidential review investigate ways of structuring the administration. Possible options included abolishing or reducing the number of provinces to allow for the strengthening of municipalities. But abolishing provincial government was not popular with the ANC’s rank and file as provincial governments and legislatures provided jobs, and were used by regional power brokers to dole out patronage.

Another option is the abolition of district municipalities. The duties of smaller municipalities should be reduced, leaving district municipalities to fulfil the rest of the mandate, said Mantashe. However, he said the state of municipalities was not all gloomy, as many were doing sterling work. “We are underselling what we have done in the last 17 years.”

The debate on the structure of government should be raised during the party’s policy conference, to be held in June next year, he said.

Credit to: The Business Day

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Metro mayors, city managers rake in big moolah

Should the ANC’s Tony Ehrenreich or the DA’s Patricia de Lille get the nod from voters in Cape Town, he or she will enjoy a salary package of well over R850000 a year.

This is apart from having full-time staff, a driver, bodyguards and, of course, the prestige of being the city’s number one resident.

Ehrenreich has, however, said he would not accept the salary if he won.

The salary for the top job in Johannesburg is even better.

Frontrunner Parks Tau, who is leading the ANC campaign, will enjoy a comfortable salary package if he gets the job.

In the city’s last annual report, mayor Amos Masondo’s inclusive package was given as R955000.

East of Johannesburg, the executive mayor of Ekurhuleni will be able to compete with the best-paid mayors in the country by taking home R950000 a year.

The same goes for the mayors of Tshwane and eThekwini, where mayor Obed Mlaba’s last reported salary was R866000.

Mayors in smaller municipalities earn less.

The executive mayor of the Metsweding district municipality, which includes towns such as Cullinan and Bronkhorstspruit, for example, receives a package of R517483 a year, including transport and cellphone allowances.

In another smaller municipality, the Sol Plaatje council in Kimberley, the mayor draws R464621 a year.

It’s not only mayors who earn hefty packages, as the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers Act shows.

In Johannesburg the maximum package for a member of the executive or mayoral committee is R723191 a year, which includes a basic salary and car allowance.

For someone serving in the same position on the mayoral committee of a small municipality, the package shrinks to R397321.

Ward councillors in the big metros can earn up to R337488 a year, while those in smaller municipalities can earn as little as R158928.

But the biggest earners in local government are the managers running the cities and towns – although their salaries are not determined by the act, but by the councils.

Johannesburg’s municipal manager, Mavela Dlamini, receives an all-inclusive package of R2.1million, while eThekwini’s Mike Sutcliffe rakes in R1.9m.

Ekurhuleni’s municipal manager, Khaya Ngema, is not far off with R1.8m annually – much more than his counterpart in Tshwane, acting manager Oupa Nkoane, who gets R1.2m. Cape Town’s Achmat Ebrahim earns R1.4m.

Nelson Mandela Bay’s municipal manager, Elias Ntoba, earns about R1.04m.

Kimberley’s Sol Plaatje municipal manager, Goolam Akharwaray, didn’t do too badly for someone running a relatively small municipality – earning a package of R1.4m last year.

President Jacob Zuma earns R2.5m this year and it will increase to R2.7m next year.

Credit to: Times Live

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Mulder lay charges against Zuma for ancestor utterance

The Freedom Front Plus is to lay a charge at the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) against President Jacob Zuma about comments he made to voters in the Vrischgewagt township near Delareyville, the City Press reported on Friday.

But the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) on Saturday said it was not aware of a complaint levelled against ANC President Jacob Zuma by the Freedom Front Plus (FF+).

According to media reports, Zuma said people who turned their backs on the ANC would have to face bad luck and explain themselves to their ancestors when they died, Freedom Front Plus (FF Plus) leader Pieter Mulder said. This was a clear breach of the IEC’s code of conduct, he said.

“Zuma’s actions is firstly intimidating in nature in that he fills voters with fear about the consequences of a vote for any other party than for the ANC, and secondly he abuses his position of traditional authority to influence voters to vote for the ANC,” Mulder said.

The Electoral Code of Conduct banned intimidating behaviour and any action where authority was abused to influence voters to vote in a certain way.

“This complaint against Zuma is being brought against the backdrop of various comments by Zuma and senior ANC members who regularly bombard voters with religious messages and comparisons with the Christian Trinity Godhead.

This behaviour is for the majority of Christians, including the FF Plus, offensive and could be seen as blasphemous. It is indicative of the ANC’s desperateness to gain votes and retain votes in the forthcoming election.”

The ANC’s actions were a consequence of a governing party becoming too strong, the party said. The same would happen if any other party came to power on its own and had to represent all the other different groups and views.

“Coalition politics where more than one party governs together holds the advantage of more checks and balances against the abuse of power,” Mulder said.

Credit to: City Press, Eyewitness News and Sapa

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Third of municipalities need intervention

An explosive report into municipal financial management recommended national government intervention in more than a third of municipalities.

The aim would be to try to stop unauthorised, irregular, fruitless and wasteful expenditure amounting to billions.

The report, presented to the cabinet by Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan on March 14, paints a picture of corruption, waste and incompetence.

According to the Beeld, the report had caused discomfort among cabinet members, prompting ministers to decide not to release it but to send it back to its authors for “reworking”.

But spokesman Jimmy Manyi said the report had been compiled by the auditor-general and no instruction had been given for it to be revisited. “The assertion that the cabinet ordered the National Treasury to ‘repackage’ the report is not only untrue, but also an affront to the integrity and ethical conduct of the cabinet,” said Manyi.

The report recommended “intervention” in 35 percent of municipalities on the basis of poor financial management; in 33 percent on the basis of poor leadership; and in 35 percent due to weak governance.

It comes as a blow to the ANC, which governs most of the 237 municipalities. The report revealed that 107 municipalities and two municipal entities accounted for R5 billion in unauthorised expenditure, of which R1.1bn had since been written off.

In addition, 168 municipalities and 22 municipal entities incurred irregular expenditure of more than R4.1bn. Municipalities themselves only reported R2.7bn of the former and R440 million of the latter, with the remaining R6bn being uncovered by auditors.

The probe was to measure how well local government was doing in meeting the requirements of the Municipal Finance Management Act.

Accordingly, the report noted a shocking rise in the number of municipalities guilty of unauthorised, irregular and wasteful expenditure.

Of the 177 municipalities inspected in the 2008/09 financial year, qualifications on the basis of unauthorised, irregular and wasteful expenditure accounted for only 13 percent of all qualifications issued. In 2009/10 this figure rocketed to 63 percent, suggesting a collapse of financial controls.

In the past financial year, 77 percent of municipalities received qualifications related to their accounting for “capital assets”, 75 percent for “current assets” and 75 percent in the category “liabilities”.

Almost a quarter of all municipalities failed to submit service delivery reports and 89 percent were found not to have complied with “regulatory requirements on service delivery reporting”.

There were “material misstatements” (185), issues related to “supply chain management” (161), and “payments not made within 30 days” (93).

In terms of financial management, the Eastern Cape was the worst-run province, followed closely by the Free State and Limpopo. The best-performing provinces were the Western Cape and Gauteng.

Credit to: Independent Online

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‘Local gvt least trusted public institution’- Report

The government’s state of the cities report, released this week, paints a bleak picture of the state of South Africa’s major municipalities, saying local government is one of the least trusted public institutions and municipalities are “remote and unresponsive”.

The report also delivers a stinging verdict on the failure of cadre deployment, remarking that senior council managers and councillors are often political appointments “and lack the skills required to do their jobs properly”.

Deficient professional capacity had resulted in underinvestment in bulk infrastructure, poor project planning and management and neglected operations and maintenance.

The deputy minister of co-operative governance and traditional affairs, Yunus Carriem, told the Mail & Guardian that the provision in the newly amended Municipal Systems Act that bans political office-bearers from serving as municipal employees is a tacit admission that cadre deployment has not worked.

“The ANC has to provide strategic and political oversight of the municipalities we win and this can be done in a variety of ways. But it doesn’t mean deploying senior ANC officials, regardless of their managerial and technical skills, as senior municipal managers,” Carriem said.

“It is the poor, the ANC’s constituency, that suffers most with incompetent senior municipal managers. In any case, senior ANC officials are meant to provide effective political leadership to the party’s structures, not get fully absorbed in the day-to-day activities of municipalities.”

The report was commissioned by government to review the past decade of local government.

It notes that local government has been criticised “for its lack of openness, unresponsiveness and poor consultation and its standing in society has deteriorated over the past decade. It is one of the least trusted public institutions in the country.”

Among its other findings is that local government has made few inroads into transforming where and how people live and has not done enough to promote urban integration.

The report comes a month before the local government elections, in which voters will choose who will run their towns and cities for the next five years.

Generally, it finds that the metro councils — Johannesburg, Tshwane, Ethekwini, Nelson Mandela Bay and Cape Town — are better at providing services, but also experience the most service delivery protests.

The report argues that because people have moved to the cities for better services, they are more prepared to take action.

“[Metros] are struggling to manage the huge social and economic implications of urbanisation and apartheid spatial planning. This convergence of pressures has created dangerous conditions for social instability. Public protests are common, widespread and often violent.”

The report also finds that the breakdown of trust between communities and elected councillors, combined with internal political party factionalism, has resulted in instability and undermined decision-making in many places.

Credit to: Mail and Guardian

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Mass municipal strike coming

The South African Municipal Workers Union on Wednesday announced its members would go on a nationwide strike in May.

A previous municipal strike. Photo courtesy of SABC News.

Spokesperson for the union Tahir Sema said they decided to embark on the strike due to “a number of issues nationally, affecting the union and its membership”.

The strike would start in the Free State on May 10 and Gauteng May 11 as they were “hot spot provinces”. National action was planned for May 13 and then it would spread to the North West on May 27 and Mpumalanga on May 31.

In a statement he said the union confirmed its support for the ANC in the upcoming local government elections.

“The programme of action … is not in any way intended to disrupt the upcoming local government elections and will ensure we respect citizens’ rights to participate in the elections.”

He said the protest would continue until the problems raised were resolved.

During the strike members planned to march and deliver memorandums to Gauteng MEC for co-operative governance and traditional affairs, the South African Local Government Association, the Free State premier, the ministers of labour, public enterprises and justice and the presidency.

Problems raised by Samwu included “attacks” on workers and union leaders as well as “political dismissals”, the privatisation of public services and assets, and the transfer of services from local to provincial government.

The union wants the president not to sign the Municipal Systems Amendment Bill into law, and remove provincial government from the Constitution. It wants limitations on workers’ rights to strike removed from statutes, an end to labour brokers and corruption and Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs Minister Sicelo Shiceka dismissed, if the allegations against him were true. It also raised its concerns about police brutality.

“These mass actions will be used to name and shame the beneficiaries of corruption within the public sector and the private sector.”

Credit to: News 24

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