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["South Africa","Business Maverick"]

Ackerman family resign control of Pick n Pay

After almost 60 years of synonymous leadership with the Pick n Pay brand, the Ackerman family is relinquishing control of the struggling retail giant, with Gareth Ackerman stepping down as chairperson to pave the way for a new era of transformation under CEO Sean Summers.
DIVE DEEPER ( 2 MIN)
  • Ackerman family relinquishing control of Pick n Pay after almost 60 years
  • Gareth Ackerman stepping down as chairperson after 14 years
  • Pick n Pay facing financial challenges, posts R3.19-billion loss
  • Board undergoing restructuring, new chairperson to be identified
(Photo: Waldo Swiegers / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Synonymous with the Pick n Pay brand, the Ackerman family are relinquishing control of the retail giant almost 60 years after Raymond Ackerman established the retailer.

Pick n Pay has announced that Ackerman Investment Holdings (AIH) is giving up its majority shareholding in the struggling group and Gareth Ackerman, the chairperson of PnP, will be stepping down after 14 years in the position.

Ackerman assumed the chair vacated by his father, Raymond Ackerman, who died last year. 

Gareth Ackerman is also co-chair of the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa.

The Ackermans, who hold a controlling stake in the group, have made a firm written confirmation to follow their rights under the anticipated Pick n Pay Rights Offer, subject to reasonable satisfaction with its terms and conditions. The exact mechanism has not been finalised yet but their voting rights will fall below 50% after the rights offer.

PnP Ackerman

Pick n Pay chairperson Gareth Ackerman. (Photo: Dwayne Senior / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Pick n Pay is fighting for its survival. On Monday, 27 May, the retailer – which was once the market leader – posted a full-year loss after tax of R3.19-billion. A year ago, it posted a profit of almost R1.2-billion. 

It also abruptly reappointed Sean Summers in October 2023 to turn the retailer around, after warning that it would post its first interim loss. He has warned it could take at least 18 months to return it to profitability.

In a company statement, PnP said the Ackermans’ representation on the board of directors will be reduced to three members from this year’s annual meeting. Gareth, Suzanne and Jonathan Ackerman will remain on the board. Deputy chairperson David Robins, who has served on the board for 22 years, will retire at the FY24 AGM.

The board is in the process of identifying Ackerman’s successor as non-executive chairperson.

Pick n Pay Summers

Pick n Pay Group CEO Sean Summers. (Photo: Supplied)

Suzanne Ackerman will remain as chairperson of the social, ethics and transformation committee and will retire from the nominations committee with immediate effect.

Over the next 18 months the board will be rotating or retiring long-serving non-executive directors.

Striking a positive tone, Gareth Ackerman said the family’s rights offer revealed their faith in the future of Pick n Pay: “The changes in the control structure being announced today are intended to support the business in its transformation under the leadership of CEO Sean Summers and his management team.

“The Ackerman family has for some time been considering the changing operating environment and the need for renewal at Pick n Pay, including at board level. To quote a favourite expression of my father, ‘We need to listen to the whispers of tomorrow’. The difficulty the business has found itself in recently has proved an opportune moment to accelerate the renewal process.”

Ackerman said that on a personal level he had been wanting to retire as chairperson for some time. He planned to stay on as chairperson to support the management through the transition until the publication of their FY25 results. DM

Comments

All Comments ( 10 )

  • Ritey roo roo says:

    PnP is still my favourite shop, although I do go to Checkers for 2 items which they do not stock. It’s quite amusing to see the comments about the staff. At one time it was Checkers that had the worst, talking over you at the tills etc. and chattering amongst themselves whilst you waited.

  • Very interesting and informative news

  • Malcolm McManus says:

    I find PnP very expensive in my area. Also not as clean or organized as Spar. Nothing seems to flow. Its old fashioned and needs to remodel itself.

  • D'Esprit Dan says:

    Don’t know if it’s just my perception, or there is a broader malaise at play, but I find staff at Pick ‘n Pay to be the least friendly and helpful of the major supermarket groups. Maybe there is a corporate culture issue that’s not being addressed? No idea, to be honest!

  • Confucious Says says:

    It’s the right decision given that Gareth does not have the passion and foresight that his late father had. They simply cannot grow or adapt as long as AIH strangles the business. Hopefully Summers can bring back some of the original passion and consumer-friendliness that saw it at #1 when he started. The original directors and manages must have been very sad to see their once-shining star being so badly steered over the years!

 
["Maverick News","South Africa","Politics"] age-of-accountability

New challengers threaten DA’s majority in Western Cape

The DA's Western Cape majority is at risk, as support for new parties is expected to surge and others look to win over voters on the Palestine issue. The DA, however, remains confident.
DIVE DEEPER ( 9 MIN)
  • DA faces a threat to its majority in the Western Cape after 15 years of control, echoing national challenges for the ANC.
  • Decline in DA support attributed to voter shifts to FF+, Good Party, EFF, and Al Jama-ah, with voter turnout also dropping.
  • Polls suggest potential for coalition government in the Western Cape as DA support wavers.
  • Issues of poverty, apartheid spatial planning, and foreign policies challenge DA's clean governance image ahead of elections.
Illustrative Image: DA leader John Steenhuisen at the 2024 State Of The Nation Address at Cape Town City Hall on 8 February 2024. (Photo: Victoria O'Regan)

For the first time since taking control of the Western Cape 15 years ago, the DA faces a significant threat to its majority. The dynamics echo the national challenge faced by the ANC. While the ANC needs to lose eight percentage points to lose its majority nationally, the DA only needs to lose six percentage points to jeopardise its hold on the province.

The Western Cape has always presented a unique political landscape compared to national trends. Unlike other provinces where the ANC has traditionally dominated, the Western Cape saw no party achieving an outright majority until 2009 when the DA secured 51.46% of the vote. The party increased its support to 59.38% in 2014, its best result to date, but saw a decline to 55.45% in 2019.

The decline was attributed to DA voters moving to the Freedom Front Plus after losing trust in then-leader Mmusi Maimane, while others switched to the newly formed Good Party, the EFF and Al Jama-ah. There was also a slight drop in voter turnout in the province, as was the case in the rest of the country. 

In the 2021 local government elections, the DA’s overall support dropped to 54.26%, down from 63.33% in 2016. Although local government election results do not perfectly predict general election outcomes, they do reflect electoral trends, suggesting potential challenges for the DA in the upcoming elections.

An Ipsos poll from October 2023 put the DA’s support in the upcoming elections at only 44% and suggested there was a possibility of a coalition government in the province.

Another poll by the Social Research Foundation in March 2024 put the DA at 53%, but the tentative conclusion found: “The data suggests that the DA is holding its majority on the national ballot paper, even as its majority on the provincial ballot paper comes under pressure and is now within the margin of error. What that means is that it is plausible for the election to deliver a coalition government in the Western Cape.”

Read more in Daily Maverick: 2024 elections

While the DA boasts about clean and corruption-free governance, this has not stopped parties from challenging them on the state of impoverished areas, the persistence of apartheid spatial planning, and the party’s foreign policies. These issues continue to fuel debates and could have an impact on voter sentiment as South Africans prepare to go to the polls on 29 May.

DA Western Cape

Western Cape voters

According to Electoral Commission of South Africa registration statistics, 3,310,798 people have registered to vote in the Western Cape, with Cape Town accounting for the majority, just more than 2 million, followed by Drakenstein with 137,000 voters and then George and Stellenbosch with just more than 100,000 registered voters each. 

Khayelitsha and Mitchells Plain have the biggest voting districts. These are areas that feel neglected by the provincial government and are targeted by opposition parties in the upcoming elections. 

The ANC stands to benefit from its support of coloured Muslims who are unhappy with the DA’s stance on the Israel-Palestine war but are not happy with the ANC’s governance nationally. 

The ANC has been working to improve its performance in the province, and there have been efforts to address internal party issues and improve voter engagement.

Parties like Patricia de Lille’s Good Party, Al Jama-ah, Rise Mzansi, the National Coloured Congress, Marius Fansman’s People’s Movement for Change, which has former Cape Town mayor Dan Plato on its books, stand to benefit from the voters who are unhappy with both the ANC and DA. 

New challengers 

Dr Sithembile Mbete, a lecturer in the Department of Political Sciences at the University of Pretoria, said the DA had also struggled in recent by-elections, which saw Gayton McKenzie’s Patriotic Alliance (PA) taking wards from both the ANC and DA. 

“We are so used to framing all of our politics as ANC vs the DA … but we saw already in 2019 the kind of impact new parties that are appealing to the coloured vote can have.” 

Mbete said voter turnout would play an important role. As was seen in the 2016 municipal elections, a high voter turnout produced a blow for the incumbent ANC in Gauteng metros. With the presence of new parties such as Rise Mzansi and the PA gaining momentum, this could spell disaster for the DA. 

PA McKenzie

Patriotic Alliance leader Gayton McKenzie at the party’s Victory Rally held at Athlone Stadium in Cape Town on 10 May 2024. (Photo: Gallo Images / Brenton Geach)

“The DA will be challenged or constrained in the turnout,” she said.

“If the people who stayed away in 2019 but are on the voters’ roll decide to show up this year, I think those people are going to show up not to vote for the DA but rather the new alternatives. That is where parties like PA and Rise Mzansi could really benefit.

“The second challenge for the DA is the issue of Palestine. The ANC, Al Jama-ah, and possibly Good Party could benefit from that. To some degree Rise Mzansi.” 

Mbete also argued that the people who are not happy with service delivery especially in Cape Town, usually do not vote, but whoever inspires them to vote this time around will make a big dent in the DA’s hold on the Western Cape. 

“That is where the threat of a party like Rise Mzansi comes in and that is why the DA calls them mercenaries. I think the DA will drop some votes, but it will not be [so] significant that the DA won’t be able to govern the Western Cape.”

Professor Amanda Gouws from the Department of Political Science at Stellenbosch University said the ANC, Al Jama-ah and other smaller parties stood to benefit from these elections.

“The DA will lose support and some of the smaller parties will gain, such as Rise Mzansi and the Patriotic Alliance. Gayton McKenzie is making inroads. So it is possible that the DA will go below 50%. Then they will draw on the support of the Multi-Party Charter.”

DA putting up a fight

DA provincial leader Tertuis Simmers said the party was on course to amass sufficient votes to get an outright majority in the upcoming elections and surpass the 2019 results by achieving a 60% electoral victory. 

“What our figures are telling us is that something massive is going to happen in the Western Cape,” he told Daily Maverick.

“Our party will reap the harvest in many areas where the DA difference was felt and seen. Where we are currently in opposition, like the Central Karoo, we have seen the need of the DA and people want that clean governance.” 

Tertius said that in the last 18 months of campaigning the DA had surpassed its own expectations by registering 20,000 more people. Of the threat presented by parties such as the PA, Tertius said the PA had been busing people around to make it look like they had a lot of support and using food parcels to attract more voters. 

“The communities vote for them and after by-elections the PA leaders disappear,” he said.

“If you look at places like Knysna where the PA is in a coalition with the ANC and EFF, service delivery has declined. They are destroying Knysana, Theewaterskloof, and more and more people are seeing beyond the rhetoric. The DA is the party to vote for if people want service delivery.” 

ANC stronger

The ANC believes that it is going to perform much better than it has done in the previous two elections in the Western Cape owing to its level of canvassing. In 2019, the party won 28.63% of the provincial vote.

“I know there’s been a bit of a talk about canvassing targets; we have set our targets very high,” ANC Western Cape spokesperson Khalid Sayed said. 

“We’ve been picking up a lot of positive sentiment towards the ANC compared to before. Also, the 15 years of DA failure has begun to lead many people to see us as an alternative government in the province.” 

The party could get a boost in support owing to its pro-Palestine stance and the government’s success in the case against Israel at the International Court of Justice (ICJ), which could draw more Muslim voters to the party. 

On Friday, 24 May 2024, the ICJ ordered Israel to immediately halt its military offensive in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, referring to the humanitarian situation in Rafah as “disastrous”.

“Many people who haven’t voted at all want to participate in the election because of the ANC’s support of Palestine. People have seen that the ANC has taken practical action to support the Palestine people.” 

EFF poaches

The EFF shocked many in December last year when it won its first ward in the Western Cape. This made the EFF the fourth-largest party in the Saldanha Bay Council. The party won 4% in the province in 2019.

Read more in Daily Maverick: EFF beats ANC for major upset in Saldanha Bay, but ruling party wins big in KZN, North West

The EFF has struggled to attract support in traditionally coloured areas and to try change this it poached the former leader of the Plaaslike Besorgde Inwoners (PBI), Virgill Gericke. 

Gericke was the founder of the PBI, which took part in municipal elections for the first time in 2011. He was a councillor in the George Municipality before he resigned to join the EFF.

The PBI holds eight council seats across the province: five in the George Municipal Council, two in the Garden Route District Municipality and one in the Knysna Council.

Knysna’s deputy mayor is from the PBI, despite the party having only one seat in the council.

Daily Maverick has been reliably informed that PBI will take directives from the EFF Western Cape. The party has also been flirting with the taxi industry, and party leader Julius Malema met with its leaders this month when he visited the Western Cape. 

Good is good

Good party MP Brett Herron said the party had done more campaigning than in the previous elections and it was more prepared. In 2019, it obtained 3% of the provincial vote, securing one seat in the legislature.

In 2023, the party dismissed senior leader Shaun August, who has since returned to the DA, and this year it dismissed former Springboks coach Peter de Villiers following allegations of sexual misconduct. 

“The response around how quickly we acted on allegations of sexual harassment internally was well received by many people, who observed many political parties that allow alleged sexual predators to continue to operate in their structures.” 

The party is targeting growth in the West Coast, Overberg and the Winelands.

Good’s leader, Patricia de Lille, has been serving in President Cyril Ramaphosa’s Cabinet and Herron argues that this has not affected the party.

“De Lille serves the people of South Africa, not the ANC. We have no agreement with the ANC and we regard them as a competitor in the elections.”

Rise to rise 

Rise Mzansi Western Cape convener Axolile Notywala is confident that the party will win a few seats in the Western Cape legislature as communities had given them a good reception.

Notywala is known by most communities in Cape Town for his role in fighting for service delivery while he was with the Social Justice Coalition.

“We have targeted a diverse range of people; hence we are getting attacks from all political parties,” he said.

“We are building a party that can reach all races and try to break the divide in terms of class dynamics. We are aiming for a minimum of two seats in the province.” 

ACDP looks to coalition

The African Christian Democratic Party’s (ACDP) Western Cape leader, Ferlon Christians, said that while the party was not happy with the DA’s governance of the province, it would vote with the DA to run the province again if the chance were to present itself.

The ACDP took 2.6% of the vote in Western Cape 2019.

“We are working hard to get the DA under 50% so that they can need us to govern. With our policies we can improve this province and our analysis shows that the DA will govern with our support,” he said.  DM

Additional reporting by Suné Payne.

More on the elections

 

Comments

All Comments ( 18 )

  • Johan Buys says:

    One hopes that if people in WCape that do want to send the DA a message about alliances with whatever other parties are roughly similar in policy, that they contain that smoke signal to the second national vote.

    For heaven’s sake please don’t risk the provincial majority!!!

  • Random Comment says:

    People vote for the DA (while pinching their noses) because the alternatives are much, much worse.

    The speed at which the ANC and its small party mates will destroy the Western Cape and Cape Town – in a frenzy of looting, theft, “empowerment”, “equity” and cronyism – will be astonish even the jaded few who remain.

  • R S says:

    Surprisingly I am not concerned if the DA loses support to one of its MPC partners. It’s the likes of the PA who have shown they care about only money and power and who will give it to them that have me concerned. It’s also scary when you point this out to PA supporters they ignore you or saying you’re lying, even thought it’s 100% true.

  • Rama Chandra says:

    Many of the smaller parties, like Rise Mzansi would work perfectly well with the DA, and would in fact add some colour to the party. Mackenzie of the Patriotic Alliance on the other hand is a great and fun speaker, but an absolute thug. So, the big issue is not whether the DA absolute majority is in peril, but whether the majority of DA + near peers is in peril, and that it seems is not.

  • Lyle Ferrett says:

    I deeply cherish South Africa and have remained patient for years, hoping for things to improve. However, if the DA loses its majority in the Western Cape and the ANC forms a coalition with the MK/EFF (and NHI steamrolls ahead etc. etc.), I will definitely be preparing to move to Australia.

    As a young and upcoming professional, I want assurance that I will be able to retire comfortably in the country where I’ve built my career. Unfortunately, South Africa’s increasing uncertainty doesn’t meet this critical requirement. It’s easier for me to envision it being worse off in 30 years rather than improving.

  • Steve Davidson says:

    “If you look at places like Knysna where the PA is in a coalition with the ANC and EFF, service delivery has declined. They are destroying Knysana, Theewaterskloof, and more and more people are seeing beyond the rhetoric. The DA is the party to vote for if people want service delivery.”

    Which sums the whole thing up completely. Well said Tertius. And if some of the voters in the WC are fooled by McKenzie’s bullshit, don’t come back and whinge if you lose the DA’s incredible management against huge ANC odds from the Eastern Cape’s useless and corrupt management that has led to a mass migration of economic refugees down here. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!!!!!!!!!!

  • robby 77 says:

    Yeah I doubt it.

  • Fernando Moreira says:

    God help the Western Cape if the DA loses its majority. It will clearly indicate that voters view popularity ahead of delivery !?? The Auditor General reports would be meaningless as a guide !
    Lets hope common sense prevails and the DA has a good showing in the whole of South Africa !

 
["DM168","Maverick News"] safety-and-belonging

Suspected crime isn’t paying — Nicole Johnson’s business problems tied to 28s-linked case

Nicole Johnson, wife of alleged gang boss Ralph Stanfield, faces a slew of business and legal woes, including being labeled a liar and failing in yet another attempt to secure bail, as her tangled web of deceit and questionable ventures continues to unravel.
DIVE DEEPER ( 5 MIN)
  • Cape Town municipality blacklists several of Nicole Johnson's businesses, while the national government blocks one.
  • Johnson's ties to two salons she ran have been severed, and discrepancies in links to two other ventures were found.
  • Johnson, wife of alleged gang boss Ralph Stanfield, called a liar and denied bail in recent court judgment.
  • Johnson faces business-related problems while in custody, including blacklisting of her companies by City of Cape Town and Treasury.
Illustrative image: Nicole Johnson after appearing in the Khayelitsha Regional Court in Cape Town on 1 November 2019. (Photo: Nasief Manie / Gallo Images) | Graphic: Vecteezy

Cape Town’s municipality has blacklisted several of her businesses, while the national government has blocked one.

Her ties to the two salons she was running have also been severed.

And some discrepancies were picked up in terms of her links to two other ventures.

On top of all that, Nicole Johnson has been called a liar – and she has again failed in an attempt to be released from custody on bail.

‘Doesn’t hesitate to lie’

“A holistic analysis of the evidence portrays Johnson as a person who does what she needs to even if this means being deceptive and taking the law into her own hands,” a Western Cape High Court judgment against her, handed down on 13 May 2024, says.

“She does not hesitate to lie and give false evidence, if she thinks it will benefit her. 

“Such a person does not respect the legal system and would not hesitate to undermine the criminal justice system, including the bail system.”

Please embed/Scribd the judgment here for online

Johnson is the wife of alleged 28s and The Firm gang boss Ralph Stanfield.

They have been behind bars since they were arrested in their home in the elite Cape Town suburb of Constantia in September 2023.

They face charges relating to a vehicle theft, and in Stanfield’s case, of attempted murder.

That matter, which involves three other accused, is expected to resume in the Cape Town Magistrates’ Court next month.

Failed bail attempts

Johnson, meanwhile, has faced several problems relating to her work while in custody.

She was initially denied bail in October 2023 and subsequently launched another application based on “new facts”.

That second application was turned down in January.

Johnson appealed both those decisions and that culminated in this month’s high court judgment which found she should not be released from custody.

The judgment, together with matters happening parallel to court processes, hint at the work drama Johnson faces.

It also shows how she previously considered applying for business residency in Dubai.

Dubai work plans

“She did not disclose this information, even though she deemed it appropriate to disclose that she had years ago considered relocating to Gauteng,” the judgment said.

“Even though nothing came from this, she had been in contact with a person who would have assisted with the residency applications as recently as 27 March 2023.  

“This contact could have provided her with the means of applying for residency in Dubai, if needed.”

The judgment said there was therefore “a likelihood that [Johnson] could attempt to evade her trial” if she was released on bail.

‘I don’t trust anyone’

It said that in an affidavit relating to her first bail application, Johnson had stated: “I am the senior person in all my businesses and solely responsible for the day-to-day running of the businesses.  

“I do not trust anyone to run the businesses and have not as a result empowered anyone to be able to run the businesses. Without me the businesses will fail.”

It previously emerged during proceedings in the magistrates’ court that Johnson ran two beauty stores, named Sorbet. One was in the Cape Town suburb of Green Point and the other in the city’s Canal Walk shopping mall.

According to the high court judgment from earlier this month, Johnson, during the first bail application, had testified that her “Sorbet franchise stores are going down and that the manager who was appointed was stealing”.

Sorbet severs ties

“Johnson was also informed that Sorbet Man (Pty) Ltd was cancelling the franchise agreements with her in respect of her two stores,” the judgment said.

The agreement cancellations were because she had breached a clause in that she had been absent – presumably because she was in custody – from the business for longer than 30 days.

Johnson has faced several other business-related problems while in custody.

Daily Maverick previously reported that in December 2023 the City of Cape Town confirmed it had blacklisted seven companies linked to her “based on the risk they pose to the city’s reputation”.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Risky business — City of Cape Town blacklists companies linked to 28s gang case accused Nicole Johnson

Ahead of that, Johnson’s company, Glomix House Brokers, had been involved in housing projects in Cape Town, worth millions of rands, for more than a decade.

National blacklisting

Johnson was saddled with even more business problems earlier this year.

Treasury blacklisted Glomix for a decade from 28 March, meaning the company would not be able to do work with the national government for that period.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Glomix ban — Treasury blacklists 28s gang case accused Nicole Johnson’s company for 10 years

The high court judgment handed down this month also detailed how other business operations have counted against Johnson.

It previously emerged during court proceedings that, according to the case’s investigating officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Christiaan van Renen, Johnson and Stanfield co-owned the MBT garage in the Cape Town suburb of Bishop Lavis.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Petrol price proves ‘lies’ told in the case involving alleged gangster Ralph Stanfield and wife Nicole Johnson

In an affidavit of her own, Johnson had asserted: “I am the only person in the business that can change the price of fuel at the fuel pumps.”

However, according to the high court judgment: “This statement was proven to be false by the evidence presented by the State showing that the fuel price had indeed been changed at the fuel pumps after Johnson was arrested and detained.”

Ayepyep issues

The high court judgment also said Johnson had previously not played open cards about her income from the Ayepyep Lifestyle Lounge, a venue in Cape Town’s city centre where she was the general manager, where she earned about R70,000 per month.

“Johnson’s evidence on this aspect was very confusing, intentionally so, in my view to muddy the waters,” the high court judgment said.

Daily Maverick reported extensively on previous controversies surrounding Ayepyep Cape Town.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Fear, violence and extortion in Cape Town — luxury venue Ayepyep closes amid claims of gangsterism and threats

A former owner of the venue, Kagiso Setsetse, made accusations in 2023 that Stanfield and Johnson were trying to dominate it.

Stanfield had made counteraccusations.

In September 2023, just days before Stanfield and Johnson were arrested in the case in which she failed to get bail, it emerged that a settlement had been reached with Setsetse over Ayepyep Cape Town.

Mother and brother arrested

The settlement saw Setsetse selling his shares and Johnson’s mother Barbara owning 50% of the business. 

Read more in Daily Maverick: Nearly R5-million cash, luxury watches seized as 28s gang boss accused Ralph Stanfield’s brother arrested

Earlier this month, Barbara Johnson was among three suspects arrested in a case linked to the Stanfield and Johnson matters.

She appeared in a Cape Town court along with her two co-accused, as well as one of Stanfield’s brothers, Kyle. He was arrested a short while before Barbara Johnson and was charged with defeating the ends of justice.

Unlike Johnson, the accused in that case, including her mother and Kyle Stanfield, were granted bail of R10,000 each. DM

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.

Comments

All Comments ( 1 )

  • jcdville stormers says:

    The untouchables were not so untouchable it seems

 
["Maverick News","Maverick Citizen"] learning-and-job-creation

School with a vision — ‘living memorial’ to Nelson Mandela planned for slopes of Table Mountain

In a few years a new monument is expected to rise on the slopes of Devil’s Peak above the University of Cape Town. Ironically, it will be built on a piece of land parallel to Rhodes Memorial and less than 1km away.
DIVE DEEPER ( 5 MIN)
  • Nelson Mandela School of leadership to be built on slopes of Table Mountain
  • Ceremony attended by dignitaries including UCT chancellor and Western Cape premier
  • $21.5-million donation from Atlantic Philanthropies to fund construction
  • Architectural design competition announced for memorial centre and school
In a few years a new monument is expected to rise on the slopes of Devil’s Peak above the University of Cape Town. (Photo: UCT / Wikipedia)

Only, instead of being a monument of stone and statue, a presumptuous and perpetual reminder of the arrogance of colonial conquerors, this monument will take the form of a school. It will be a building bearing Nelson Mandela’s name; a centre of scholarship and teaching intended to give birth to a new generation of democratic, visionary leaders in Africa.

On 17 May 2023, this revolutionary vision was launched at a special ceremony at the University of Cape Town (UCT). 

Its significance was borne out by the speaker list: a range of dignitaries and academics, UCT chancellor Dr Precious Moloi-Motsepe, acting CEO of the Nelson Mandela Foundation (NMF) Verne Harris, SANParks chairperson Pam Yako and Faizel Ismail, the director of the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance.

It was also attended by Western Cape premier Alan Winde.

Speaking to Harris, he said: “The partnership builds on previous partnerships between the Mandela Foundation and UCT.” The NMF aimed to “contribute to a public art installation which honours Madiba while avoiding elevating him in inappropriate ways and which speaks critically to the Rhodes Memorial close by”. 

Harris said that in future the centre will also house the foundation’s travelling exhibitions, and allow it “to explore leadership development synergies with the school”.

The new building will have a dual function: as a memorial centre for Mandela as well as the home of the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance (Nelson Mandela School), which aspires to be the African equivalent of the Blavatnik School of Government at Oxford University or the Kennedy School at Harvard.

Except that this school intends to harness and shape African leadership for the 21st century.  

The centre’s construction is made possible by a donation of $21.5-million by Atlantic Philanthropies (AP), whose president and CEO, Chris Oechsli, said this was one of the last grants made by AP as it concluded spending more than $8-billion donated by billionaire entrepreneur and philanthropist Chuck Feeney, whose philosophy and practice was “giving while living”. 

Justifying such a large grant for a building, Oechsli quoted Feeney as saying: “Good buildings for good minds can make the difference in the lives of a lot of people… these buildings and the activities they house are central to lifting up entire communities, and, yes, even nations.” 

Noting the “public governance deficits that exist worldwide”, Oechsli lamented that “rising nationalism and polarisation throughout the world are hampering the constructive and collective roles governments must play to address the needs of the people they are charged to serve”. 

Nelson Mandela School Rhodes Memorial

Rhodes Memorial on Devil’s Peak in Cape Town on 5 June 2020. (Photo: Gallo Images / Jacques Stander)

In this context, he said “the teachings, example and life lessons of the late Nelson Mandela, informed by the collaboration between the NMF and UCT, offer a ready-made blueprint for leadership development courses, case studies and teaching materials that will have a real and notable impact, not just in South Africa and across Africa, but globally”.

Oechsli described good governance as “a science, a craft and an art that is informed by knowledge and history and is best when imbued with empathy and humility that places the community it serves as its prized constituency”.

Architectural design competition

In the coming months an architectural competition will be announced to design the memorial centre and school. Luyanda Mpahlwa, respected architect and one-time Robben Island prisoner, convened a multidisciplinary advisory panel to develop the terms of reference for the competition. 

Speaking at the launch, Mpahlwa explained that the panel had explored concepts of memorialisation, symbolism and how to blend the landscape (in this case Table Mountain) with aspects of Mandela’s personality and leadership: service, humility, wisdom, inclusivity, mutual respect and dialogue.

According to Mpahlwa: “Social history and heritage are key considerations in our efforts to restore people’s dignity which was lost through centuries of disenfranchisement.” Therefore the panel had asked “how the development of the site can catalyse a new imaginary, a different relationship between land and people, one which contradicts the dominance and power which many memorials and institutions represent?” 

Public governance: Teaching and research

However, the Nelson Mandela School isn’t waiting for its grand home before starting work. 

It was officially established in 2018, the brainchild of Alan Hirsch, former economics adviser to presidents Mandela and Thabo Mbeki. Even without a permanent home, it has begun to make a mark on the continent, through its research and teaching. It is also playing a supporting role in important initiatives like the African Continental Free Trade Agreement, as well as generating ideas about how Africa can benefit from the economic and energy transition that must take place in Africa as a result of the escalating climate crisis. 

Read more in Daily Maverick: SA can support Africa on climate-resilient development goals 

In recent years it has also been bulking up its intellectual heft, drawing in globally respected thought leaders such as Carlos Lopes and ​​Dr Arkebe Oqubay, as well as a new generation that includes rising thought leaders Dr Musa Nxele, winner of the 2023 Ruth First Prize awarded by the Review of African Political Economy

The Mandela School is also now home to a number of scholars who first acquired invaluable experience and insight working at the heart of government in South Africa, including its director Faizel Ismail, the former trade and industry minister Rob Davies, Noncedo Vutula and former finance minister Trevor Manuel.

A place of encounter and political imagination

It was left to retired Constitutional Court Justice Albie Sachs to see the poetry in plans to combine a governance school and a memorial in a location as spectacular and significant as Table Mountain.

In a video recorded at the site, Sachs praised its beauty: “I’m imagining a building here where people come from all over the world, all over South Africa, all over Cape Town, to meet here and feel emotional and connect.”

Sachs called it a “spectacular spot for a place of encounter and exchange of ideas”. He recalled how “in the worst days of repression” he would climb Table Mountain “to get away from the ugliness of apartheid, to enjoy what nature has to offer, and then look down and see divided Cape Town… There’s something terrible when you find beauty ugly. When you start hating beauty.”

He concluded: “So, in a sense this place is a way of converting those negative memories into something positive, of people coming together. These things are so nourishing and enriching and so profitable for the imagination. This is a spectacular spot for a place of encounter, exchange of ideas, of interaction, of sparkle. Brilliant.” DM

Watch a short video of the launch here: Nelson Mandela Memorial Centre will make significant contribution to scholarship

Mark Heywood is an independent human rights activist and writer. He is also an Adjunct Professor at the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance.

Comments

All Comments ( 5 )

  • Gerry Hunt-Higgs says:

    “Giving While Living” the generous donator says.
    “Taking While Gaining” we say.
    Taking away yet more from our precious and fast depleting wildlife.
    Deluding the mountain of yet more trees and flora that give us Oxygen. To live. Consuming CO2 so dangerous for our existence. Giving life to fauna that is so important to our very being.
    SANPARKS should know better.
    CITY is killing us.
    The school would serve the Communities that need it mist…and would be cheaper to travel to… WITHIN the Community that needs it the most.
    This then is nothing more than a propaganda exercise of ill-educated intent.

 
["DM168","South Africa","Business Maverick"] age-of-accountability

How a court finding involving Jacob Zuma may change our tax laws for the better

​Getting access to former president Jacob Zuma’s tax records will turn unwarranted secrecy on its head. This is how a court ruling involving Zuma that may actually improve our society.
DIVE DEEPER ( 9 MIN)
  • Warren Thompson challenged the tax secrecy principle in early 2019, aiming to uncover whether former President Zuma had abused the country's laws.
  • After a legal battle, the Constitutional Court ruled in May 2023 that Sars must release tax information if it reveals a substantial law violation and the public interest outweighs the harm.
  • Despite the ruling, Sars rejected a request for Zuma's tax records in December 2023, stating no substantial law violation was found.
  • The media houses will resubmit a request to Sars, seeking transparency on how the agency handled Zuma's tax affairs.
The Sars Orlando East branch in Soweto on 12 July 2022. (Photo: Gallo Images / Fani Mahuntsi) | Sars commissionerEdward Kieswetter in Cape Town on 22 February 2023. (Photo: Dwayne Senior / Bloomberg via Getty Images) | Former president Jacob Zuma addresses MK party supporters at Alexandra Stadium on 7 February 2024. (Photo: Gallo Images / City Press / Tebogo Letsie)

It was early 2019 when Warren Thompson, a journalist working at the Financial Mail, first hit upon the idea of tilting at a long-standing tax principle that had evolved into widely accepted economic dogma.

​“It was quite a specific time,” says Thompson. “Jacob Zuma had resigned on Valentine’s Day in 2018, and Jacques Pauw had just written The President’s Keepers, which detailed how Zuma had received a whole lot of secret payments from shady individuals. And there was also all this unfinished business about how he’d benefited from the ‘security upgrades’ to his home at Nkandla.”

​The one body, Thompson felt, that would be able to confirm whether Zuma had indeed abused the country’s laws to this extent was the South African Revenue Service (Sars). 

​The only problem was, both the Tax Administration Act and the Promotion of Access to Information Act were pretty clear that all tax information had to remain secret. And unlike other instances, like national security, there was no “public interest override” which allowed the public to demand access to this information.

​“I figured that right here is the perfect example of how these access to information laws can be used to confirm, once and for all, whether the head of state had really abused his position,” recalls Thompson, who now works at Finance Uncovered in London.

​After all, if you couldn’t argue there was a ‘public interest’ in finding out whether a country’s president is breaking all the tax rules which his own party, the ANC, expects everyone else to follow, when could you?

​It was a sentiment shared by Sam Sole, founder of the amaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism and so, with the considerable assistance of Dario Milo at Webber Wentzel, and later, advocate Steven Budlender SC, the journalists set out to probe just how inviolable the notion of “tax secrecy” really was.

​Given how conservative our courts are, it seemed a long shot. In court, Sars’ advocate, Wim Trengove SC, argued vociferously that our tax system was built on this secrecy. Without it, the agency said, “the expectation that the taxpayer will be candid with Sars diminishes”.

​But in November 2021, North Gauteng High Court judge Norman Davis declared that actually it was unconstitutional for the access to information laws not to have a “public interest override” in tax matters. As a result, if the public interest case could be made sufficiently, the media houses ought to be given access to Zuma’s tax records.

​“There is no direct or factual evidence that taxpayers in South Africa rather make disclosure of their affairs because of the secrecy provisions as opposed to the coercion of the penalties and sanctions which follow upon nondisclosure,” Davis said.

​Critics lambasted that ruling. Such an opening would be “dangerous, dangerous” and “pernicious” in the wrong hands, Professor Balthazar wrote on Daily Maverick at the time. Many others felt the same, expecting the conservative elements of the Constitutional Court to overturn Davis’s finding.

​Instead, the opposite happened. In May 2023, the Constitutional Court (by a narrow five-to-four margin) upheld Davis’s ruling, effectively sweeping aside a blanket rule which had dominated the tax landscape for decades. 

​Justice Jody Kollapen said in his ruling that such an “absolute prohibition” could not be said to be “reasonable and justifiable in an open and democratic society”. 

​It was vital, Kollapen said, not to “elevate taxpayer confidentially to some sacrosanct place where no exception to enable public access to it is possible.
​The upshot, the Constitutional Court decided, was that Sars must release tax information if doing so “would reveal evidence of… a substantial contravention of, or failure to comply with the law” and the “public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs the harm”.​ ​It said the Financial Mail and amaBhungane must submit a new PAIA request to Sars, which would then have to consider this case “afresh” in light of the court’s ruling.

Records ‘can’t be found’

​It was a ground-shifting victory and in October 2023, the media houses duly sent a new request to Sars for Zuma’s tax records, asking for new documents too that would reveal how the agency dealt with Zuma’s tax affairs.

​On 1 December, Sars’s deputy information officer, Siyabonga Nkabinde, wrote back to the media houses, bluntly rejecting the request.​

​Zuma’s tax records, Nkabinde said, “do not reveal evidence of a substantial contravention of, or failure to comply with the law”, so even under this new Constitutional Court dispensation, it wasn’t obliged to release them.

And yet, intriguingly, Sars said that when it came to Zuma’s links with Royal Security – Roy Moodley’s company which Pauw said had paid Zuma a monthly retainer – these records either “cannot be found and/or did not exist”.

​And, on other tax records, Sars said it couldn’t release them as doing so could “reasonably be expected to impede criminal prosecution or result in the miscarriage of justice in the criminal proceedings” against Zuma in the Pietermaritzburg High Court, relating to the arms deal corruption.

​It’s a disturbing admission, leaving open the question of whether there is indeed evidence of criminal behaviour in Zuma’s tax records which it won’t reveal in light of the arms deal trial.

​So, is this the end of the matter, at least until Zuma’s criminal trial with Thales kicks off, and his tax documents may be unsealed?

​Well, no – the publications have now approached the Information Regulator, a body set up three years ago to hear appeals for decisions like this, to force Sars’s hand.

​If the Information Regulator finds in favour of Sars, the media will appeal to the high court; if it finds against Sars, the agency could launch just such an appeal.

​“We expect that the Information Regulator will make a decision this year,” says DJ Van Wyk, a lawyer from Webber Wentzel handling the case for the media companies. So, does this mean the records may still be released this year? “It’s possible that this happens, but it seems unlikely.”
​In the worst case, Van Wyk says, Sars may appeal this all the way back to the Constitutional Court, putting the case back under the noses of the same judges who first made that landmark decision, only years later. 

Journalists ‘fishing for evidence’​

​It’s clear that Edward Kieswetter, the Sars commissioner, has no intention of releasing anything more than he has to. Asked about the case this week by Daily Maverick, he stuck to his guns on the principle of taxpayer secrecy. “Our response to any request has significant implications for all taxpayers,” he said.

Kieswetter argues that the Constitutional Court judgment doesn’t simply set aside the confidentiality provisions, but rather puts in place a high threshold to meet for anyone wanting someone’s taxpayer records. ​In other words, the court said Sars must consider very specific factors when it gets a request – whether disclosure shows someone had broken the law, whether it shows an imminent risk to public safety, and that the public interest should “clearly outweigh the harm”.

Read more in Daily Maverick: SA Revenue Service blocks access to Zuma’s tax records, again

He was even more blunt in an interview with Business Times’s Chris Barron in March. “The fact is, the [journalists] are fishing for evidence, and one of the ponds they are fishing in is the Sars pond. I can’t allow fishing expeditions for any reason, even under the guise of public interest,” he said.​ ​Kieswetter said he didn’t care if it rings alarm bells that someone like Zuma, who was named a “person of interest” by the Zondo State Capture Commission, refuses to consent to his tax records being released. “I’m not here to fuel your thesis, or the thesis of the media, or even my own thesis,” he said.

​And yet, legally, the consensus seems to have shifted after the Constitutional Court ruling in favour of transparency.

​Aslam Moosajee, ENSafrica’s dispute resolution expert, says that while there may be specific instances where an argument for taxpayer secrecy is warranted, a public interest override is entirely justifiable where someone is a public figure.

​“Our constitutional principles of transparency and accountability are clear, and I don’t think a blanket secrecy provision accords with that,” he tells the Daily Maverick. “This is especially so in a country struggling with corruption and service delivery, where people want our politicians to be held accountable.”

​It’s vital, however, to counter the misconceptions about this legal change. In particular, the original court case was distorted by critics to make it seem like an attempt to “make everyone’s tax information public”. ​It’s nothing like that, says Dario Milo, a partner at Webber Wentzel which has poured a vast amount of time and energy into acting for the media houses in this case pro bono, recognising the value of this particular case to society. 

​Milo agreed with the general principle that taxpayer details remain secret, and this is a line that “shouldn’t easily be crossed” – except in very specific circumstances, like where there’s a “substantial contravention of the law”.

“This bogeyman that has been put out by critics – that suddenly tax information will be splashed all over the internet – that, I’m afraid, has been exaggerated and doesn’t accord with the judgment at all,” he said.

​Milo points out that most other categories of information – even legally privileged and national security information – can be accessed under our access to information laws, if there is a public interest involved.
​“Why is tax information immune from the public interest override in circumstances where all these other categories of information are not?” he asks.

But is South Africa ready for it?

Hennie van Vuuren, executive director of Open Secrets, argues that there’s a strong argument to be made for the top leadership of all political parties to routinely open their tax affairs to public scrutiny.

​“The very powerful ought to be required to provide a high degree of transparency, since they’re potentially lobbyists for vested interests. They’ve chosen higher office, so we should have full disclosure of their interests, and while we do have sight of their property assets, we do need to know about their income,” he says.

Van Vuuren doesn’t say as much, but you can imagine this scenario in a practical sense: if a political party such as Julius Malema’s EFF, say, is lobbying for tobacco interests, it would be useful for the public to have a line of sight into whether any of his income or assets have been funded by these interests.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Party to the Plunder? ANC’s dodgy donations

​Comprehensive publication of tax returns is a nice idea, and routine in countries like Norway, Finland and Sweden. But is South Africa ready for that sort of radical transparency?

​“I think you could say the very conservative people who run our financial institutions aren’t ready for that,” says Van Vuuren.

​He cites the case where Open Secrets and the SA Heritage Archive had to drag the SA Reserve Bank to court to get records detailing financial corruption during the apartheid era. In 2020, the Supreme Court of Appeal granted the request – but the records provided no more detail than that which was already in the public domain.

​“What does that tell us? It tells us that they’re not even protecting apartheid profiteers, but rather that it’s the conservative lawyers calling the shots in our institutions, who have a knee-jerk desire to ensure there’s no precedent for openness,” he says.

​If those lawyers were shocked when the first ruling against Zuma was handed down, they’d have been apoplectic when the Constitutional Court confirmed it later.

​Zuma has left much unwanted legal precedent strewn across our society, from contempt of court orders, to his battle with former public protector Thuli Madonsela over the extent to which state money was used in his private residence. Finally, here’s one court finding involving Zuma that may actually improve our society.

​For Thompson, this is precisely what the PAIA is there for. ​“When you read the preamble to that Act, it recalls how the apartheid government committed terrible abuses under the veil of secrecy, and pledged a new era in which state information would be released if someone asks for it. You don’t get a clearer test case than this,” he says. DM

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.

Comments

All Comments ( 19 )

  • Graham Swan says:

    Criminal Cadres will always protect their fellow criminals……

  • Les Thorpe says:

    Another example of how the “legal system” is specially designed to protect those in high office, under the guise of protecting the innocent. Just remember that SARS is a branch of the ANC crime syndicate and the head honcho must do all in his power to retain his job.

  • In my opinion all public office bearers in Parliament, Judges, CEO’s of SOE’s and management at SOE’s should allow the public access to their tax affairs.
    Looking at some MP’s etc, there is no way their MP salary can pay for their lifestyles.
    Especially presidents and leaders of parties.
    I don’t think much is declared in Parliament.

    If you are a public figure, you must be open to us the public & few taxpayers who pays their salaries.

  • Rod H MacLeod says:

    The only ones lobbying for tax secrecy are those with something to hide.

  • D'Esprit Dan says:

    It should be law that if you’re running for public office that your tax records are open to scrutiny. Only those with something to hide would object. It would hopefully clean up this cesspit of corruption quite quickly.

  • Notinmyname Fang says:

    SARS plays a dirty game
    It makes a splash in the every time it goes after someone and it readily puts all their dirty laundry out in the public domain. So when does this holy secrecy clause apply?

  • Middle aged Mike says:

    Kieswetter and co could be on the level but I very much doubt it. Far more likely that they are simply another part of the network of corruption enablers deployed by the glorious liberation movement.

  • Cachunk Cachunk says:

    Kieswetter’s desperate defense of the anc’s plundering makes me less likely to be tax compliant than more, so his argument that releasing Zuma’s tax records would worry tax payers shows how completely out of touch he is!

  • Mike SA says:

    Mr Kieswetter needs to take note that the public at large question how some members of the ANC or persons who benefit from the ANC like Shawn Mkhize get away for so long not paying huge amounts of tax.
    Many of the cases of corruption and fraud have been as a result of fishing expeditions of journalists so why should Mr Kieswetter have a problem with this.
    In how many instances has SARS contacted the NPA to report suspicious remuneration of politicians for investigation ?

  • Gordon Pascoe says:

    It seems Kieswetter fears SARS being exposed for allegedly turning a blind eye to the many government, provincial and municipal officials exposed for corruption but have yet to be charged by anyone. Could it be that SARS are just as reluctant as the public prosecutor’s office to bring government officials exposed by the Zondo commission to book?

  • Geoff Coles says:

    Everything is different but has anything changed….Zuma and the likes are royal game.

  • drew barrimore says:

    The SABC and the ANC’s little pre-election ZANU-PF Third World trick on display for all to see, many to comment on, and no-one to take any action. A president and a captured politically-self-enslaved ‘public’ broadcaster collude to drive home an electioneering speech on the eve of an important election. Any takers on trying to get these people to account? Nope.

  • William Kelly says:

    Amen. If you are paid by the public purse the public has a right to know. Its a free choice to serve the people and this is part of the price for the large payments received for such ‘service’. Frankly, none of these servants should be paid anythibg. Ore than minimum wage. But thats a different debate.

  • Grenville Wilson says:

    Why no comments?

  • Pet Bug says:

    Here’s a request for financial transparency information from the SABC:
    how much did the free national broadcasting electioneering stunt by Ramaphosa two days before the 2024 national election cost SABC – and the taxpayer?

 
["Maverick News","South Africa","Maverick Citizen"] safety-and-belonging

Police officers come under fire in Mthatha as taxi violence spirals out of control

SAPS officers made arrests after being shot at on Monday morning as violence erupted during a taxi blockade of Mthatha in the Eastern Cape.
DIVE DEEPER ( 3 MIN)
  • Five suspects arrested in Mthatha after police units came under fire during taxi blockade violence
  • Tension remains high in Mthatha with major roads closed; firearms confiscated and investigation ongoing
  • Border Taxi Alliance linked to violence following police seizure of 53 firearms
  • Calls for army intervention as violence escalates, mayor urges calm and condemns disruptions
Scenes from Mthatha where a violent taxi strike has seen the N2 and R61 roads blocked, people warned to stay at home and several people shot. 27 May 2024. (Screengrabs: Supplied)

Five suspects were arrested at around 10 am on Monday in Mthatha after members of the SAPS’ public order policing unit and the Mthatha visible policing unit came under fire as violence during a taxi blockade of Mthatha spiralled out of control.

“Two suspects sustained injuries while the other three were arrested. Two firearms were also confiscated. A case of attempted murder and possession of firearms is opened for further investigation,” police spokesperson Colonel Priscilla Naidu said.

She said the situation in Mthatha remained tense with many roads coming into and out of Mthatha closed since this morning.

It is understood that members of the Border Taxi Alliance (Bata) are behind the violence that was allegedly triggered by a mass police operation confiscating 53 firearms belonging to its members.

“Currently, the main road, the N2 and the R61, is closed. Motorists are advised to use alternative routes and to avoid these roads. Public Order Policing, the National Intervention Unit and Tactical Response Teams are in Mthatha policing the situation,” Naidu added.

Mthatha

A crime scene near the Shell Ultra City in Mthatha where a senior member of a taxi association’s vehicle came under fire. 27 May 2024. (Photo: Supplied)

Watch here to see a video of security forces deployed in Mthatha.

Provincial Commissioner Lt Gen Nomthetheleli Mene warned those sending videos and messages inciting unrest that they were on the wrong side of the law.

“We will take strict action against anyone found to be engaging in activities that threaten the safety and security of the public and the integrity of the election process,’ she added.

Violence and murder spiral

The violence was allegedly triggered when the police confiscated 53 firearms, including hand weapons and rifles after armed men rocked up at the Nelson Mandela Academic Hospital to guard their fellow members of one taxi association who were wounded during several shootings last week.

The blockade started early this morning, and by mid-morning, it resembled a war zone. Watch a video on the streets of Mthatha here.

The Eastern Cape Department of Transport shared this video of the operation during which the firearms were confiscated.

It is further understood that a senior member of one of the taxi organisations was gunned down in his Toyota Fortuner vehicle. The incident happened near the Shell Ultra City in Mthatha West on the N2, and the vehicle with the injured man was found in the nearby Chris Hani informal settlement.

One of the vehicles where people were shot. (Screengrab: Supplied)

Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane asked President Cyril Ramaphosa to send the army to stabilise the situation.

“We have mobilised law enforcement agencies to intervene with full might to control the situation in Mthatha. I want to thank the police for acting swiftly on those who wanted to disrupt operations at the Mthatha Airport. I have also requested President Cyril Ramaphosa to assist with deploying the South African National Defence Force in the area. What we will not tolerate are acts of anarchy that include the blocking of national roads and looting of goods from trucks. We have opened our lines for engagement for all parties involved to find an amicable solution to the problem. We call on those causing these disruptions to refrain from such immediately,” Mabuyane said.

Meanwhile, the mayor of the OR Tambo Regional Municipality, Mesuli Ngqondwana, called for calm.

Ngqondwana said his utmost concern is the safety of motorists, truck drivers, pedestrians and passengers stuck for hours in the blockaded areas.

“Authorities are doing their best to facilitate a discussion aimed at resolving the matter without further harm to property and persons,” emphasised the Executive Mayor.

He added that he strongly condemns any violence or disruptions during this time.

“Our district must remain a place of peace, safety, and stability,” he said.

A truck with EFF voters’ rolls and t-shirts was among the vehicles looted. DM

Comments

All Comments ( 2 )

  • Random Comment says:

    Must be the “third force” at work, again [eyeroll]

  • jcdville stormers says:

    Follow the money ,this is all about money,people die because of money wars

 
["Maverick News","South Africa"] age-of-accountability

Grand corruption — David Mabuza, Fred Daniel and the new trial judge

Conservationist Fred Daniel faces yet another delay in his legal battle against former deputy president David Mabuza and the Mpumalanga provincial government, with the trial now set to drag on until 2025. However, a deeper reading of events revealed Judge Tuchten’s firm hand in the face of a serious threat to the judiciary.
DIVE DEEPER ( 11 MIN)
  • Trial in the case involving conservationist Fred Daniel vs. former deputy president David Mabuza postponed to 20 January 2025.
  • Postponement marks another delay in the marathon civil action that has spanned over a decade and cost millions in legal fees.
  • Plaintiffs had submitted extensive evidence implicating Mabuza in alleged criminal activities dating back to 2002.
  • New trial judge, Judge Neil Tuchten, to decide on urgency of trial and potential restart from scratch.
Illustrative image | Sources: Deputy President David Mabuza. (Photo: J Countess / Getty Images) | Conservationist Fred Daniel. (Photo: Supplied) | GroundUp / Ashraf Hendricks | Twitter

Note: The events outlined in this report took place on 13 May. In light of the historical sensitivities surrounding Daily Maverick’s reporting of the case, the decision was made to wait for the official court transcript before proceeding with the compilation of this article.     

‘The trial is postponed to 20 January 2025 to run between 20 January 2025 and 28 March 2025, and between 14 April 2025 and 20 June 2025 (save for 29 and 30 April and 2 May 2025).”

To the casual observer, these words may have appeared to herald a devastating blow to conservationist Fred Daniel in his marathon civil action against former deputy president David Mabuza and the Mpumalanga provincial government. 

Set down in the opening paragraph of a court order dated 13 May 2024, the words were confirmation of yet another inordinate postponement to case number 34502/2010 of the Gauteng Division of the High Court in Pretoria — a matter that had initially been lodged in July 2010; had run through five court sessions over more than 150 days; and had so far cost the plaintiffs in the region of R60-million in fees, with the South African taxpayer footing the (much steeper) legal bill for the government’s team.

As reported by Daily Maverick, the sixth session of the trial had originally been scheduled to commence on 6 November 2023 when the government defendants were due to call their witnesses and present their case. 

Daniel, for his part, had closed the plaintiffs’ case on 12 June 2023, after his advocate Jacques Joubert had called the last of 17 witnesses to the stand. Importantly, the fifth session included the testimony of former Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency CEO Jacques Modipane, who had placed on the record that he’d been warned by Mabuza’s henchmen not to appear before the judge. 

As important, aside from the oral evidence, the plaintiffs had by then submitted thousands of pages of written testimony to the Pretoria High Court, mostly in support of Mabuza’s alleged role in a large-scale, many-tentacled criminal enterprise that originated in Mpumalanga back in 2002. 

But less than six weeks after the closure of the fifth session, on 24 July 2023, President Cyril Ramaphosa discharged Judge Cassim Sardiwalla from the Bench. Given that Sardiwalla had presided over all the evidence in case number 34502/2010, Daily Maverick sent a list of questions to the Presidency and judicial leadership — questions that, as demonstrated by a press statement from the justice ministry accusing us of spreading “disinformation”, would remain (until this writing) forcefully disavowed. 

For the plaintiffs, on the other hand, the summer of 2023 brought some exceptionally good news. Since they had unexpectedly secured ace advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi as senior counsel, for them there were only two questions left to ask.

First, would the new trial judge understand the urgency of getting the trial back on track? More specifically, would the new judge follow the explicit directive of Deputy Judge President Aubrey Ledwaba, who had stated in signed correspondence that the diaries of counsel would not affect the timing of the trial’s recommencement?  

Second, would the new trial judge order that the trial begin de novo? In other words, after 14 years of litigation, would Daniel be required to begin again from scratch?

As regards the first concern, Ngcukaitobi submitted the following to the Gauteng Division of the High Court in Pretoria in his heads of argument of 28 March 2024:    

“The defendants are not ordinary litigants. They are organs of state (or employees of organs of state) with heightened litigation duties. They ought to have approached this issue in a manner that better promotes the effectiveness and efficiency of this Court’s process. It is also in the interests of justice that the serious allegations of public corruption levelled against the defendants be determined as expeditiously as possible.” 

By Daily Maverick’s reading, what Ngcukaitobi may have been alluding to here was the alleged “Stalingrad tactics” of the government defendants, which we had covered at length in August 2021 and again in September 2022

More to the point, though, Ngcukaitobi was addressing a paragraph in the defendants’ heads of argument which referred to the availability of their own senior counsel.

“Advocates [Mike] Hellens SC and [Dawie] Joubert SC are prepared to set aside the first term of the year 2025, and if necessary, the second term of 2025, to begin and conclude this matter, and will keep the dates open,” the document noted.

And so, on 13 May 2024, when it was time for the parties to argue the question before Judge Neil Tuchten — who, as a former member of the Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture, appeared the perfect fit to replace Sardiwalla — it was a moment of palpable tension. 

“Can I really impose a date?” asked Judge Tuchten, in response to Ngcukaitobi’s request that the trial resume on 1 June 2024. 

“Yes,” said Ngcukaitobi.

“On the other side, where their counsel is not available?”

“Yes, well sure,” Ngcukaitobi continued, “that’s what the directive says. The directive says we’re not going to help them by non-availability of counsel.”

“I’m not sure that would be just,” responded the judge. 

Ngcukaitobi was adamant. “My Lord, but then, when are we going to get the trial… I mean, we can’t have this trial in 2025, that is just a fundamental breach of my client’s rights. And of the Constitution.”  

The precedent sidestep

As evidenced by the court order, which was signed and stamped by Judge Tuchten on the same day, Ngcukaitobi would lose the argument. The judge announced a short recess so that he could consult DJP Ledwaba on the matter, and when he returned he informed the parties that the power to set a date for the resumption of the trial was his and his alone.

Again, as suggested at the outset of this piece, to the casual observer it may have appeared that Daniel was on a hiding to nothing. Not only had the new trial judge denied him a fundamental constitutional guarantee — the section 34 right of every South African citizen to a fair trial — but the judicial leadership itself had walked back on its word.  

And yet a careful reading of the court transcript, together with the full background context of the challenges now posed to the judiciary by case number 34502/2010, would convince Daily Maverick that Tuchten was skilfully managing a fraught and arguably dangerous situation.

For starters, given that Sardiwalla had presided over a virtual trial necessitated by Covid-19 as well as (according to the plaintiffs) the security of the witnesses, this was the first time that the parties were facing one another in open court. For Daily Maverick, the essential difference was the ability to pick up on the general atmosphere of the courtroom, as translated through the body language and facial expressions of the various participants. 

Judge Tuchten had put it this way: “Well, speaking now from my own experience … a movie is not the same as a live show.”

He was addressing a central point in the plaintiffs’ heads of argument, which Ngcukaitobi had presented earlier in the hearing — namely, that since every trial day of the previous court sessions had been recorded via Microsoft Teams, the judge could simply watch the recordings and resume the trial from where it left off.

To Judge Tuchten’s reasonable insistence that he would prefer to see the witnesses in the flesh, Ngcukaitobi had conceded. But, in his response, the advocate added an ingenuous caveat.

“You want your own questions to be answered,” said Ngcukaitobi, “I perfectly understand that. That is why I suggest to your Lordship that the debate we’re having is really a false debate about whether it’s de novo or it’s a continuation. The real question is, it’s within your Lordship’s discretion about how this trial should continue … and it is possible your Lordship might identify the witnesses that you want to hear from, where it would not be sufficient to rely on video evidence or on transcripts.

“In which event we must then produce those witnesses, whether we produce them physically or we produce them online.”

For Judge Tuchten, it was clear by then that there would be no more “online” for case number 34502/2010; if he was worried about the security of the witnesses or even himself, he wasn’t admitting it to anyone. More significant, however, was the gap that he had just been offered by Ngcukaitobi; a gap that he appeared to be one step ahead of. 

“Isn’t there another way?” the judge asked, rhetorically. “[There] is the Law of Evidence Amendment Act, I think, of 1988, am I right?”

“Yes, 1988,” said Ngcukaitobi. 

“That would take care of a considerable scope for a positive advocacy,” stated the judge, “without having to bang up against the brick wall of precedent.”

“That is true,” Ngcukaitobi agreed. 

So there it was, a judicial movement that deftly sidestepped the arguments based on case law and precedent, which had been brought by both parties in their attempts to sway the judge on the all-important de novo question. In the court order, it would appear as follows in paragraph 2:

“Subject to paragraph 3, the trial shall commence de novo.” 

What, then, did the third paragraph state?

At the top, it ordered that these preliminary matters would be settled at another interlocutory hearing, set down for 21 and 22 October 2024. To be decided at that hearing, firstly, would be the status of the pleadings, with the plaintiffs arguing that they should “remain as they are” and the defendants arguing that they should “revert to their form or status before the start of the trial before the Honourable Justice Sardiwalla”.

In a nutshell, while the pivotal question of Judge Sardiwalla’s alleged “cognitive ailment” had not magically disappeared (see below), Judge Tuchten was setting aside two days to determine whether his predecessor’s rulings through the duration of the trial would stand or fall. The genius of the ploy was in the fact that it was an all-or-nothing gambit — no more court days would be wasted by the parties arguing for the status of each pleading on a case-by-case basis. 

Then there was the second part of the third paragraph, which dealt with the admissibility of the oral evidence over which Judge Sardiwalla had presided. Here, the reference was to section 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act, specifically “hearsay evidence”. According to the court order, the witnesses that had previously given testimony would be subject to the various provisions of this section — with, again, the plaintiffs applying for certain evidence to be admitted, and the defendants opposing. 

As for the written and documentary evidence, Judge Tuchten was clear: the affidavits and discovered documents, such as the voluminous expert reports, would stand, as would the entirety of the court record.

What may have looked like a win for the defendants on the surface, therefore, on a deeper reading was turning out to be anything but.  

Shark-infested waters    

Still, if there was one thing above all others that demonstrated Judge Tuchten’s skill at navigating these shark-infested waters, it was the speed with which he forced the parties to arrive at a mutual agreement. Because, although the hearing had been set down for two days — 13 and 14 May 2024 — by lunchtime on the first day the respective legal teams were out in the hallway, banging out the court order.

By 3pm on 13 May, all that was required of the judge was his official stamp and signature.   

As the parties would have been well aware, this was an unprecedented turn of events for case number 34502/2010. Not once since the matter had been lodged had the plaintiffs and defendants come together so readily — in fact, as demonstrated by the reported “disgust of the judiciary” back in August 2022, the trend was the polar opposite.

From the perspective of the judicial leadership, no doubt, these early signs of Judge Tuchten’s firm hand would have been a very welcome outcome. All indications were that the new judge would indeed be able to dispense of the matter by June 2025 — and his order that the merits and the quantum (ie, the legal arguments and the damages claim) would be argued “as one” was another major timesaver. 

But, as hinted at above, there was still an issue of serious import for the judiciary that the new judge would have to navigate: the question of Judge Sardiwalla’s alleged “cognitive ailment”. 

The defendants, in their heads of argument filed in March 2024, asserted that the nature of the ailment — unspecified, but apparently an “open secret” in legal circles — was such that it probably stretched back to July 2021, when Judge Sardiwalla first took control of case number 34502/2010. Ngcukaitobi, on the other hand, informed Judge Tuchten at the hearing on 13 May that the ailment was merely “speculative,” since no medical records had been furnished. 

It was not a matter that Judge Tuchten could ignore, simply because it was a fait accompli that the defendants would be bringing it up again at the interlocutory hearing set down for October 2024. And in anticipation of this, it was Daniel’s advocate Jacques Joubert who told the judge what he did not want to hear.                 

“I just want to make this one point,” Joubert said on 13 May, “[Judge Sardiwalla] has given, since 2020 … 41 reportable judgments. And after his medical boarding … he’s given at least five reportable judgments. I just think that’s important for the court to know, surrounding the allegations of his cognitive situation.”

For the  first and only time during the hearing, Tuchten appeared to lose his composure.

“If the parties drive me to it,” he said, “and it’s raised in the proper procedural setting, I will have to make a finding on this. I would very much like not to do so, but I would, if I had to.”  

The irony here, from Daily Maverick’s perspective at least, was that it was the advocates for the Gupta brothers — Hellens and Joubert — who were driving a narrative that presented an almost existential problem for the judiciary. And more than that, it was these self-same advocates who at that very moment were facing the prospect of a misconduct probe for immigration fraud in Namibia

Was Judge Tuchten, on behalf of the entire judiciary of Gauteng, going to fold in the face of such a narrative?

Again, this was a question that would be answered in October 2024. 

For now, all we had to go by was Judge Tuchten’s performance on 13 May. 

“The allegation,” he put to Hellens, at one point during the morning, “is grand corruption, is it not?”

Hellens, in response, was somewhat ornery. “Yeah,” he said, “they don’t understand corruption, but the allegation is corruption and collusion.”

“I understand corruption,” the judge said. DM

Read more in Daily Maverick: Mpumalanga ‘land claims scam’

Comments

All Comments ( 10 )

  • Bryan Shepstone says:

    All the best Fred, from every reasonable South African, I’m sure.

  • Jack Russell says:

    I remember Neil Tuchten as an extremely decent man, this from thirty years ago when he acted as an advocate for me. Good luck to him, I’m sure he will bring wisdom to his judicial decisions.

  • John Patson says:

    And while the judges and lawyers earn their dinners, the bush is destroyed… Never grows back as it was, scrub, largely devoid of wildlife takes over.

  • Middle aged Mike says:

    If you haven’t clocked that dollar couch guy is exactly the same as the very worst of his comrades you are being foxed by his slither. The idea that he didn’t discharge the presiding judge to torpedo the prosecution is as implausible as that of him delivering smart cities and a high speed rail network.

  • Peter Oosthuizen says:

    As long as Mabuza surrenders his passport – Dubai is probably waiting with open vaults.

  • Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso says:

    Power to Fred. Power to Justice.

  • Dennis Bailey says:

    Wow! DM go for it! At last, evidence of a judge with spunk!

  • Denise Smit says:

    Very interesting and enlightening. Thanks

  • Leon Schipper says:

    There are so many ways one can interpret, “Yeah, they don’t understand corruption”, and none of them remotely good.

  • Harold Daniel says:

    Thanks

 
["Maverick News","South Africa"] safety-and-belonging

Electoral Commission of SA quashes MK party’s vote-rigging allegations

IEC clarifies that videos showing alleged vote-rigging are actually just the logistical setup for special voting, while MK party members cry foul and claim bias towards Ramaphosa's ANC, prompting heightened security measures and warnings against fake news spreaders ahead of the 2024 elections.
DIVE DEEPER ( 4 MIN)
  • IEC clarifies videos of alleged vote-rigging actually show logistical arrangements for special voting.
  • IEC assures public of security measures to prevent foul play in election material transportation and storage.
  • MK party claims videos depict rigging attempt, urges stakeholders to monitor electoral process closely.
  • SAPS identifies 632 high-risk voting stations, NatJoints ready to ensure safety and security during elections.
Law enforcement personnel are ready to secure safety and security throughout the general elections.. (Photos: Shaun Swingler and Chanel Retief)

The Electoral Commission of SA (IEC) has clarified that videos on social media of alleged vote-rigging actually depict its planned logistical arrangements and storage of election materials and ballots in preparation for the first day of special voting on Monday, 27 May.

The videos in question are of activities at the IEC storage sites in Chesterville and Hammarsdale in KwaZulu-Natal. uMkhonto Wesizwe (MK) party members have claimed the videos depict an attempt to rig the general elections.

In a statement on Sunday, IEC spokesperson Kate Bapela assured the public that transporting and guarding these materials was facilitated by law enforcement to prevent any foul play.

“The planned security measures were that the trucks distributing ballot papers are escorted by SAPS to the local storage site. These storage sites will then be guarded on a 24-hour basis.

“This arrangement would ensure that the storage sites are protected against unauthorised entry, burglary and tampering with election materials and ensure detailed control and recording of all items in storage,” the statement reads.

MK members were said to be camping outside an IEC warehouse at which the ballots were delivered.

“No party will be allowed to gain entry into the warehouse premises of the commission. We instruct the leadership of the MK party to immediately leave the warehouse as the commission urgently needs to finalise the distribution of election material,” the IEC statement reads.

The commission also denounced any threats to its staff members. This follows an incident in eThekwini where a presiding officer was woken up in the middle of the night when concerns were raised about bulk material stored at the Baptist church voting station in Chesterville. The materials were then taken to Cato Manor police station.

“It is part of the logistical plan for the commission to deliver bulk material to voting stations ahead of election day. This is meant to ensure that voting stations open on time as only security material such as ballot papers will be delivered on the day of voting.

“The commission strongly condemns threats to its staff. No party nor its representatives have authority to gain access to private homes of electoral staff. No party nor its representatives may take control of election material without being authorised,” the statement reads.

Read more in Daily Maverick: Elections 2024

MK party spokesperson Nhlamulo Ndhlela said the videos affirmed the MK party’s long-held view that the IEC was partisan towards “Cyril Ramaphosa’s ANC”.

“These incidents, which our members informed us, are occurring in other provinces such as Limpopo, Mpumalanga, Eastern Cape, and North West, are particularly alarming as they compound the growing distrust amongst a majority of South Africans towards the IEC — a view which the MK party has repeatedly raised.

“The IEC’s relentless collusion with the ConCourt judges to have President Zuma barred from participating in parliamentary elections — an action beyond its mandate — exemplifies its increasingly partisan stance against MK party and President Zuma, for Ramaphosa and his ANC,” he said.

He urged stakeholders, including civil society and international observers, to join the party in closely monitoring the electoral process.

Read more in Daily Maverick: ConCourt stamps Zuma’s ticket to political wilderness, throws MK into uncharted waters

High-risk voting stations

Meanwhile, SAPS Deputy National Commissioner Lieutenant General Tebello Mosikili said the National Joint Operational and Intelligence Structure (NatJoints) was ready to ensure safety and security throughout the elections.

Speaking to the media on Sunday, she said the unit had identified 632 high-risk voting stations around SA which it would monitor.

“The task at hand is one that is immense, but through past experiences of ensuring the safety and security of past elections, we are confident that we are ready for this next phase. Indeed, the road to a safe, secure and peaceful election requires the commitment and effort from all stakeholders including our communities. We are grateful that thus far, our communities and South Africans from all walks of life have continued to display responsible conduct and behaviour,” she said.

She said a team would closely monitor social media for any suspicious activities.

Election day resources

“Amongst the team that is deployed is the social media team that is continuously updating NatJoints of any such warnings that are being issued sporadically across the country that are election-related. The team is alerting on intelligence collection on the social media space without being specific to anyone.”

She encouraged parties to practise tolerance and warned social media users not to peddle fake news.

“We … caution responsible citizens, especially social media users, [against] spreading fake news. You are all urged to verify facts first before sharing any information which often leads to unnecessary confusion and panic.

“We will not tolerate any incitement of violence on any platforms. Our intelligence communities and cybercrime units are closely monitoring online users. You are warned not to step out of line,” Mosikili said. DM

Comments

All Comments ( 7 )

  • Andrew Molyneaux says:

    If I am wrong please correct me – This is my understanding of the process of Vote Counting – At every polling station the votes are counted in the presence of Party Officials and the results recorded and then entered onto a counting sheet – It is my understanding that this counting sheet is then “published” on the door of the voting stations and similtaneously the result sent to the IEC Centre – If this is indeed the case then it stands to reason that every party will have in its possession the vote count at each station – If so why can that not be reconciled against the IEC results – Would this not validate the vote, and also remove opportunity for “rigged votes”?

  • Paul T says:

    MK are pretending to be worried about vote rigging so they can claim actual vote rigging and use that as an excuse to run riot.

  • Philip Machanick says:

    If MK expects the vote to be rigged, what does this say about Zuma’s time in government?

  • No comment

  • Lynda Tyrer says:

    Is the IEC making excuses, surely no political parties should be allowed anywhere near the storage areas and if they are be arrested, since when is anything free and fair in this country.

  • Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso says:

    Evil vs Evil.

    Save all of us. Vote DA.

  • Dennis Bailey says:

    Desperadoes being desperate!

 
["Maverick Citizen","Maverick News","South Africa"] safety-and-belonging

Taxi violence surge — Mthatha blocked off as gunshots heard, people warned to stay indoors

Following claims that the police had disarmed one faction in a deadly taxi war this weekend, Mthatha in the Eastern Cape was blocked off completely on Monday morning, while gunshots were heard inside the town. WhatsApp warnings were sent to residents to remain indoors.
DIVE DEEPER ( 4 MIN)
  • Access roads into Mthatha blocked, shots heard, trucks looted in chaos
  • Eastern Cape government calls for military backup amid taxi violence
  • Taxi associations clash, police operation sparks tensions
  • Police respond to violence, urge peaceful resolution in taxi feud
An image from a video taken early on Monday morning in Mthatha as taxi operators blocked all entrances into the town. (Screengrab: Supplied)

The N2 and all other access roads into Mthatha were completely blocked off this morning (Monday, 27 May), shots could be heard inside the town, and trucks stuck were looted in the mayhem.

Just before 9am the Eastern Cape government confirmed it had called for reinforcements for the police from the South African National Defence Force. 

It is understood that the blockade follows a police operation last week at Nelson Mandela Hospital where panicked staff were confronted by a large group of men armed with rifles and other firearms. Taxi organisations are claiming the police are taking sides in a conflict that started last week and has already claimed several lives, by disarming one of the factions.

In the past week, 18 people were injured in taxi-related incidents in Mthatha.

Two voice notes were sent early in the morning by residents who managed to get to work, warning others to stay at home. The notes stated that the Border Taxi Association was behind the blockades and that angry members of the organisation were also burning cars. Several fires could be seen on videos of Mthatha but this has not yet been confirmed.

‘We do not want to kill your kids’

Another voice note said: “Mazibuko, chairperson of the taxi association in Mthatha. I want to warn you all parents and their school kids that we do not want to be dragging kids into this, which may result in their deaths. Please keep them at home, we do not want to see them. In hostels, we do not want to see any kids outside. We do not want to kill your kids; this is serious. Please take this message seriously.”

Police spokesperson Priscilla Naidu said taxi violence broke out between rival associations on Sutherland Street in Mthatha last Thursday. Six people were shot and wounded. A total of 38 pistols and five rifles were confiscated for further investigation. 

It is understood that the taxi associations are demanding the return of their firearms.

“A group of people from a taxi association gathered at the hospital. These individuals were armed with firearms, and according to the hospital, staff and patients felt intimidated and threatened, thus fearing for their safety,” Naidu said. 

taxi violence Mthatha

At about 8am on Monday trucks stuck on the N2 near Mthatha were being looted. (Screengrab: Supplied)

“Police responded after the group failed to adhere to the intervention by the private security. The group was approached and searched. Many of them were armed with pistols and rifles. The presence of the group is linked to the taxi violence that took place on Wednesday and Thursday in Maclear and Mthatha, respectively,” she added.

Charges of intimidation, trespassing and contravention of the Control of Access to Public Premises and Vehicles Act were being investigated. 

Read more in Daily Maverick: Non-payment of scholar transport fees triggers huge taxi strike in Eastern Cape

Read more in Daily Maverick: Port St Johns on knife’s edge amid bid to broker peace between warring taxi associations

Provincial Commissioner, Lieutenant-General Nomthetheleli Mene said the SAPS is committed to maintaining peace and order and will respond promptly to any situations threatening public safety. 

“It is imperative to clarify that our officers were dispatched in response to a formal complaint received from the hospital. Our primary objective was to restore order and ensure the safety of all individuals within the public space, which in this case was the hospital. We, once again, urge all parties involved in the taxi feud to seek peaceful resolutions and respect the rule of law.”

Mene also urged feuding taxi associations operating in the Maclear area to resolve their differences through dialogue and negotiations. 

Bullets fly

Last Wednesday, two Toyota Fortuners were on their way from Maclear to Tsolo at Ntywenka cuttings on R396 when they were shot at by unknown persons. One person in one Fortuner was killed, while the others got into the second vehicle and drove off but collided with an oncoming Toyota Quantum. A passenger in the Quantum sustained a gunshot wound to her arm. 

On the same day, the local hospital reported that a person brought to the hospital by taxi owners had died while several others sustained gunshot wounds.

Police are investigating two murder and 12 attempted murder cases. 

Trucks were hijacked and used to block the entrances to Mthatha. (Screengrab: Supplied)

About 5km from the crime scene, two VW Polos with four occupants were found, and a bag containing two pistols, a magazine and rounds of ammunition were seized. The suspects, aged between 25 and 44, are detained on charges of illegal possession of firearms and ammunition. Police are probing their possible link to the shooting incident. 

“Violence is not the solution and only leads to unnecessary suffering and loss of life. We will increase visibility in the area and take decisive action against those perpetrating violence,’ Mene said.

Unathi Binqose from the Eastern Cape transport department said Mthatha Airport was also shut down. 

“Eastern Cape Transport and Community Safety MEC Xolile Nqatha has issued a stern warning that the state will deal decisively against any fearmongers responsible for voice notes and videos that are doing the rounds of social media, seeking to intimidate, inciting violence, threatening people’s democratic right to participate in the upcoming elections,” he said.

“The most recent of these social media posts is a brazen video recording by a man, allegedly who calls for a complete shutdown of Mthatha, a stop of election campaigns in and around Mthatha, less than 48 hours before the elections.

“Those travelling to, from and through the Mthatha area are urged to either delay their travel time significantly or avoid the town completely as law enforcement is busy trying to control the situation in the town.

“All the major entry/exit points have been blockaded, allegedly by protesting taxi operators. They have hijacked trucks and used them to blockade both sides of the N2 and have done the same with the R61 road.

This has also affected the operations in Mthatha Airport, which has also been forced to close for the time being.” DM

Comments

All Comments ( 2 )

  • Patterson Alan John says:

    Nothing has changed in Mthatha.
    I lived there for three years (1990 -1993) and taxis shooting at one another and setting fire to vehicles was observed first-hand. We were playing tennis and had to hide behind a concrete fencing wall. Unfortunately, after the shooting stopped, we had to abandon the tennis match due to the vehicle’s toxic smoke blowing across the court.
    It was a horrible town then and my imagination tells me what it looks like now.
    More decrepit.

 
["Maverick News","South Africa","Politics"] safety-and-belonging

Clarens — the town that knows it won’t have load shedding after the polls

Clarens, the "jewel of the Free State", boasts a remarkable 11-month streak of no load shedding, showcasing a unique blend of social cohesion, environmental conservation, and pragmatic partnerships that keep this tourist mecca shining bright amid the political quagmire of the Free State.
DIVE DEEPER ( 6 MIN)
  • The Titanic Rock welcomes visitors to Clarens, known as the "jewel of the Free State".
  • Clarens offers insight into South Africa's past, present, and future, attracting tourists with art festivals and beer fests.
  • Clarens gained fame as Eskom's first load shedding-free town, using modern methods like WhatsApp groups for coordination.
  • The town's success is attributed to community spirit, conservation efforts, and pragmatic partnerships across political divides.
A view of the R712 from Bethlehem which winds through Noupoortsnek and past Titanic Rock on its way to Clarens. (Photo: Gallo Images / GO! / Francois Haasbroek)

The Titanic Rock welcomes you to Clarens — the ochre, red and gold sandstone sentinel is a fitting entry point to the town known as the “jewel of the Free State”.

Clarens wears its past in its name. The Boer leader of the Transvaal Republic, Paul Kruger, was exiled to Clarens in Switzerland. As the Free State crumbles, Clarens also offers a way of understanding South Africa’s present and future.

The town is a tourist mecca for art festivals, beer fests and good times. Situated more or less in the centre of South Africa, it draws a crowd from KwaZulu-Natal and Johannesburg who want a country weekend with plenty of gees. We saw and heard Australians, Chinese and other visitors from further afield.

A few minutes from Clarens is the Golden Gate National Park, a spectacular 340km sprawling nature reserve on the border with Lesotho. (Photo: Spencer Eckstein)

Clarens has earned fame for another reason: it was Eskom’s first experiment with voluntary load reduction in an entire town. While the rest of us have enjoyed a respite from crippling power cuts for about 60 days (pre-election days, most people think), the town’s been load shedding-free for months.

No load shedding for 11 months straight

“Since August 2023, we don’t have the load shedding,” says community leader Eben Mofokeng. I had read stories of how a bakkie went around town telling people to turn off high-demand appliances when Eskom alerted people about the high power load, but the methods are more modern than that. 

“You join a WhatsApp group. The Clarens Residents’ Association gets the information from the municipality.” People then switch off in a remarkable display of social cohesion. 

Mofokeng is a son of the soil and grew up on a farm that was turned into a golf estate, the other welcome mat in Clarens. It is where well-heeled tourists come to stay and play. Mofokeng moved to the township of Kgubetswana long ago, but when a friend recently invited him over to the estate, he needed a PIN code to enter his birthplace. 

“That hurt me. Even the electric fence [did]. It’s my ancestral place. I understand if you buy a place it belongs to you…” His voice trails off into the too often unspoken place that is South Africa’s story of land theft and the slow, slow pace of land reform and reclamation.

Mofokeng’s home in Kgubetswana is lovely and a community centre. Still, it’s not the land of his birth and birthright.

Clarens

Community leader Eben Mofokeng from Kgubetswana, Clarens. (Photo: Spencer Eckstein)

Mofokeng has stayed close to the land. He was one of the first rangers when the Clarens community and the municipality of Dihlabeng put their resources together to protect the Clarens Village Conservancy, which is at the heart of the town’s tourism success. Surrounded by mountains, it is a place for hiking, rest, rejuvenation and what the Japanese call “forest bathing” — being in nature. The conservancy marks out trails and keeps the town clean and the municipality on track.

Tourists, in turn, keep Clarens well run, an island of prosperity in a province ruined by the governing ANC’s decades of provincial capture and cadre-led government. Party strongman Ace Magashule ran the Free State into the ground over decades. Now expelled by the ANC, he is trying to get back in via his new party, the African Congress for Transformation (ACT). A week before Daily Maverick visited, Magashule was in town, trying to get Kgubetswana to vote him back in.

The posters suggest that the black vote will be split between the ANC, ACT, the MK party and even Hlaudi Motsoeneng’s African Content Movement. The white vote is being contested by the DA and FF+. 

Clarens

Neked Food restaurant and cannabis café staff in their car. (Photo: Supplied)

An ANC town that works — pragmatic partnerships at its heart

Time has not changed the town’s racial political divide, but its pragmatism is impressive. Clarens is an ANC ward under mayor Tjhetane Mofokeng in the municipality of Dihlabeng. They make it work through a mix of community spiritedness, cross-subsidisation and an active DA councillor, Irene Rügheimer. 

Mofokeng says the conservancy, where he worked for years, is just one example of how the town stays resilient. 

“We have ‘Keep Clarens Clean’

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— so it’s the cleanest town in Dihlabeng. This thing of conservancy was new to black people. We taught people that each animal has rights, and we worked with traditional healers,” he explains. The rangers had to teach sustainable harvesting of medical plants like the African potato, Mofokeng says.

The load reduction plan succeeded because the town is small enough to organise on WhatsApp and wise enough to recognise the interdependence that cuts across party lines. 

“If restaurants did not have electricity, they would close. There’s low crime in town. The police are always all over the place.” Tourists must feel safe, and they do, judging by the crowds on the weekend we visited. The place buzzes with a diverse crowd of out-of-towners filling its bars, restaurants, shops and art studios. Many artists have moved to Clarens, giving it a bohemian feel. 

Horses take children on trips around the square, and craftspeople from the rest of Africa sell their wares. 

Owner Vanessa Jarvis-Findlay with visitors at the Neked vegan restaurant in Clarens. (Photo: Supplied)

Power cuts killed the cannabis cakes

At Neked vegan restaurant and cannabis café, owner Vanessa Jarvis-Findlay says load reduction saved the town. “Everything had to be battery operated or run by candlelight. Load shedding for four, six, eight hours was cutting us off at the knees. Businesses started to close. It killed the nighttime trade,” she recalls.

“Everybody was getting short-tempered and irritable. When the electricity went down, the water went down.” Generators killed the town’s gees and buzz. “You couldn’t hear anything,” she remembers. Neked sells ice creams and cakes laced with CBD and cannabis — in addition to its fabulous vegan menu, these keep the visitors coming.

“We’d be baking cakes and the lights went out without fair warning.” Now the municipality delivers a fair warning when the electricity load is low, and the word spreads on WhatsApp, Facebook and phones. Jarvis-Findlay says residents encourage each other and call out the big users. Eskom trialled the plan for three months from 2pm to 10pm and then hit the “go” button. It has worked and Clarens is the only town guaranteeing there won’t be load shedding once this week’s election is done and dusted. 

Eskom is led by chairperson Mteto Nyati and a new CEO, Dan Marokane, who have proven steady hands at the tiller. This fix, with reforms in independent generation and transmission, is also helping things. However, most South Africans still believe the reprieve to be a pre-election ploy by the ANC. Various studies have shown that load shedding and unemployment are the two biggest drivers of voter choice. 

Jarvis-Findlay is Clarens’ famous pro-cannabis activist. After using CBD oil to help recover from trauma and cancer she moved to the town, quickly becoming a leading entrepreneur and part of the colourful human embroidery of the place. She opened her café in 2019 when a Constitutional Court judgment opened the door to legalising weed, and married a local man. 

She staged a pro-cannabis, bare-breasted march on horseback on the eve of a beer fest. (with pic) When the horse bolted, and she fell naked to the ground, the applause from the onlookers on the square was wild. The stigma fell too, and now Jarvis-Findlay does a brisk trade and has a membership base of 10,000 with 100,000 feet through her door, she says. 

Vanessa Jarvis-Findlay rode a horse while naked to advertise her new cannabis café and join the movement to legalise weed.
(Photo: Supplied)

Other small things keep Clarens going in a province that is going nowhere and offer a way of thinking about what a future South Africa may look like.

Local businesses employ local people. Mofokeng says the founder of Clarens Xtreme, which offers quad biking, rock climbing and paintball, has trained many young people and pays well above the minimum wage. Other businesspersons do the same, he says. 

More on the elections

In Kgubetswana, quad bike tours go up and down through the town. The local NG Kerk pastor offers 250 children homework supervision, food, games and computer skills every day, Mofokeng says. The municipality is kept on its toes by residents who regularly point out they are the tax base of the municipality. There are conscious attempts to build bridges across town and township, Mofokeng says.

When the vote count is done and dusted next week, Clarens’ lights will stay on.

Its method of bringing an end to power cuts and of working together is a good local example of what keeps South Africa going even when good governance goes AWOL. DM

Comments

All Comments ( 6 )

  • Neil Parker says:

    Neked Restaurant and Neked Insurance. Only in South Africa! But kudos to all the citizens and business of Clarens – when local government is truly local South Africa shines!

  • JDW 2023 says:

    That horseback photo made my Monday morning 😛 (but the article should perhaps have come with a NSFW tag at the top as my boss just walked passed….)

  • Gavin Brown says:

    Professional journalism at it’s best !!!!

  • D'Esprit Dan says:

    Clarens is a great example of how small towns can reverse the decay and collapse we see in so many parts of the country. Not everywhere has the amenities and advantages that Clarens does, but with decent partnerships between residents and councils, you can certainly keep towns in a decent state. However, much depends on the will of local political elites to actually give a damn – and therein lies the rub.

 

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