Thursday, January 16, 2014

Zuma not exempt from tax on Nkandla

Exemption for national key points doesn’t apply, but work-related expenses exempt.
An exemption in the Income Tax Act for security expenditure at national key points is not going to help President Jacob Zuma to avoid paying taxes on expenditure at his Nkandla residence.

There are however other arguments he can put forward to avoid paying more than R80million fringe benefit tax on the upgrades said to total R206 million.

On the face of it Zuma can invoke section 24D of the Income Tax Act. It allows a taxpayer to deduct security related costs at national key points for tax purposes.  Nkandla has reportedly been declared a national key point. The expenditure was however done by government and not by Zuma himself.

A tax practitioner who asked not to be named says even though an employee did not incur the costs himself, costs incurred by an employer that the employee is being taxed on, are in some instances considered as costs incurred by the employee.

He says that in terms of section 23(m) a natural person can however not make a deduction against remuneration income in respect of certain expenses such as those relating to national key points.

He says to avoid tax liability on fringe benefits a person will have to prove that the benefits are work-related. “If your employer sends you to London for work, it does include an element of personal benefit, but you won’t be taxed on it, because it is primarily for work.”

If Zuma cannot prove that the benefit, or elements of it, is work-related he will however be liable for tax like any other taxpayer receiving personal benefits from his employer. “It was under the leadership of former, late President Nelson Mandela that the tax legislation was changed in 1994 to ensure that state presidents and their deputies are taxed just like any other taxpayer in South Africa,” he says. “It is only the pension of retired state presidents and deputy state presidents that [is] still exempt.”

As the law stands, even security services to a state president and deputy state president after retirement are taxable, he says.

He agrees with Pretoria auditor Rudie van Zyl (see ‘Zuma’s Nkandla tax headache’) that Zuma will have to pay fringe benefit tax on any personal benefit derived from the upgrades.

According to a calculation by Mail & Guardian (M&G), based on a leaked preliminary report on Nkandla by Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, Zuma personally benefitted to the tune of R20 million, which would land him a tax bill of R8 million. See the original M&G article here.

Van Zyl added that improvements to Zuma’s immovable property, the value of movable property like furniture bought for his benefit and the value of obligations paid on his behalf like municipal accounts are taxable if he personally benefitted from it.

In terms of paragraph 16(1) of Schedule 7 of the Income Tax Act any benefit enjoyed by any other party on Zuma’s behalf, can be regarded as a taxable benefit to him, Van Zyl said. That may apply to a tuck shop that was allegedly build for one of his wives and the R90 million that was allegedly paid to his “team”, including the architect, quantity surveyor and builder.

Taxed at a rate of 40% this element might add R36 million to Zuma’s tax bill.

The tax expert says it is the obligation of the employer to do the tax deduction from the employee, but state employers seldom think about tax implications when they bestow benefits on employees.

An example outside of the state itself is that of Julius Malema. It was widely reported that he did not pay any income tax, but the question is seldom asked why the ANC Youth League (ANCYL) did not deduct the employees’ tax as was its obligation as an employer to do.

Van Zyl said the obligation for declaring Zuma’s tax benefit does not rest with Zuma alone. His employer has to declare the benefit within 30 days after the end of the tax year and show it on his IRP5. If the employer fails in this, the Commissioner has to determine the taxable benefit and instruct the employer to collect it.

South African Revenue Service (Sars) spokesperson Adrian Lackay earlier said to Moneyweb: “Once the facts around the expenditure on the matter have been finalised and published, Sars will be in a position to determine whether any tax consequences may arise. Sars will then apply its legal mandate.”

It seems if the argument that the Nkandla pool is indeed a fire pool is upheld, it may save Zuma from a hefty tax bill.

'EFF Nkandla house recipient living in fear'

Sthandiwe Hlongwane, who was given a house built by the EFF near to President Jacob Zuma's Nkandla homestead in KwaZulu-Natal, fears she and her family could be attacked, The Sowetan reported on Monday.

Thirty African National Congress supporters were arrested on Saturday after the Economic Freedom Fighters handed over the house they had built for Hlongwane, and were allegedly pelted with rocks by ANC protesters.

Hlongwane told The Sowetan: "I was glad when I was offered the house but I was not aware it would cause all of this [violence]".

"I now fear that myself and my family members could be attacked."

However, she did not intend moving from the area.

The 30 people arrested are expected to appear in the Nkandla Magistrate's Court later on Monday.

Toilet repairs cost Cape Town R13m

Cape Town - The City of Cape Town has spent over R13 million repairing stolen or vandalised flush toilets and standpipes in the past six months, it said on Wednesday.
“The over R13 million spent has been on, among others, replacing and repairing stolen taps, broken taps, stolen handles, broken standpipes, stolen hand-basins, blocked toilets, and damaged toilet structures,” mayoral committee member for utility services Ernest Sonnenberg said in a statement.
The repairs were done between July 1 and December 31 last year. Sonnenberg said the money could have been used to improve the water and sanitation conditions in the city's informal settlements.
“When a few destructive individuals illegally and selfishly destroy city infrastructure, they not only place a huge demand on the department's budget which could be avoided, but most importantly, obstruct the provision of basic services to the broader community.”
The city planned to install 1300 flush toilets in this financial year to the Imizamo Yethu, France, RR Section, Dunoon, Rasta Camp, and Lansdowne Road informal settlements.
The number of toilets had risen from 14 591 in 2006 to more than 40 700, Sonnenberg said.
In May, the city approached the Western Cape High Court after groups of people disrupted the servicing of container and portable flush toilets (PFTs) in informal settlements.
At the time, former Sannicare janitors responsible for cleaning communal toilets blocked part of the N2 highway with burning tyres and dumped faeces on the road.
Some residents of Barcelona and Kanana informal settlements apparently removed some of the container toilets from the neighbouring informal settlement, Europe, to close down the highway.
An interim interdict was obtained against 89 former Sannicare employees and seven residents of Ward 40, associated with the ANC Youth League.
The interim order prohibited the named individuals from interfering with service delivery, city staff, and property. A second protest took place in the vicinity about a week after the interdict was granted.
In protests against rolling out the PFTs human waste was thrown on, among others, the steps of the Western Cape legislature and at provincial premier Helen Zille's convoy.
- SAPA 

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Man dies in Cape Town shack fire

Cape Town - A man who was burnt in a shack fire in an informal settlement in Masiphumelele, near Fish Hoek, died on Tuesday, said the City of Cape Town.
The fire destroyed 27 shacks and displaced 100 people early on Tuesday morning, the city's mayoral committee member for safety and security Jean-Pierre Smith said in a statement.
A woman was treated for smoke inhalation.
Cape Town residents were warned to be cautious over the next few days as the hot weather conditions could lead to runaway fires.
Smith also called on residents to be vigilant when making fires, especially in high-risk areas such as informal settlements, because they might spread.
The spread of fires was directly influenced by the materials used in the construction of the shacks and the distance between each shack, Smith said.
He urged residents to use cooking and heating devices responsibly and not to use illegal electricity connections.
- Sapa

Yay and nay for major Cape projects

Cape Town - The controversial proposal to develop the Philippi Horticultural Area – the rich agricultural area of the Cape Flats known as the city’s “bread-basket” – has been turned down by provincial Planning MEC Anton Bredell.

But Bredell has given the nod to a change in the city’s structure plan that could pave the way for development of the equally controversial Wescape multibillion-rand “self-sustaining mini-city” proposal north of Blaauwberg.

His decision on Philippi will probably stall a complaint by the Greater Cape Town Civic Alliance to Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, sent just last week, to investigate the alleged “irrational, illegal and unconstitu-tional behaviour” of mayor Patricia de Lille and her mayoral committee.

This was because the council agreed in November 2012 to shelve an application for the 6 000-unit, mixed-use development in Philippi until it had considered the findings of an independent food system study of the metro’s food networks.

But in May last year the mayoral committee had a change of heart and resolved that, given the “massive demand for housing and increased burden of delivery”, a review of the urban edge – a statutory planning tool designed to protect rural land from urban creep – needed to be undertaken “with great urgency”.

 

Both development proposals – the Philippi and Wescape – were supported by the city’s DA political leadership but drew major flak from residents, ratepayers and non-government groups.

They were cited as examples of how the DA administration was allegedly wooing development at the expense of the environment, and centralising land-use planning approvals while reducing the opportunity for public participation.

The Philippi decision was welcomed as “good news” by the Greater Cape Town Civic Alliance and as “fantastic” by the Save the Philippi Horticultural Area group.

The response to the Wescape decision was muted, with alliance chairman Len Swimmer saying they were not so concerned about it as it was opposed by all the city officials. They did not believe this proposal – which is only aimed at post-2020 – would become reality.

“While we don’t agree with the Wescape development, we’d rather accept this than have the Philippi Horticultural Area destroyed,” he said.

“We support the city’s officials and the UCT reports (by planning experts) that the Wescape development will be a burden to the Cape Town taxpayers. The enormous costs and strain in infrastructure make this development a pipe dream.

Nazeer Sonday, secretary of the Schaapkraal Civic and Environmental Association and spokesman for the Save the Philippi Horticultural Area, described Bredell’s decision as “a victory for the people of Cape Town who have spoken out against this development”.

He called for greater co-operation and a closer working relationship between the city and residents so that an overall management plan for the Philippi Horticultural Area could be put in place.

The two decisions, announced on Monday by Bredell, both involved applications to amend the city’s Spatial Development Framework and to change the defined urban edge.

The Philippi proposal was to change the designation of 281 hectares of land involving 38 privately-owned properties in the south-western sector of the agricultural area, from “agricultural land of significant value” to “urban development”.

Wescape is a proposal for a self-sustaining mini city and is set to be built between Melkbosstrand and Atlantis on the north-western edge of the metropole.

The city’s biggest urban development project to date, the 3 100-hectare proposal will be the first mega-housing development since Mitchells Plain was established in the early 1970s.

The R140 billion project involves 200 000 houses, 415 schools, 370 public service facilities and 15 sports complexes built over the next 10 to 15 years, and the population of this “mini city” is expected to reach 800,000 by 2036.

john.yeld@inl.co.za


Sunday, January 12, 2014

ANC members arrested in Nkandla

Nkandla - A number of ANC supporters were arrested after they clashed with EFF members near President Jacob Zuma's Nkandla home on Saturday.

The Economic Freedom Fighters were handing over a house they had built, next to Zuma's homestead, to a woman and her grandchildren.

A heavy police presence monitored the situation since Saturday morning and had kept the two groups separate.

The African National Congress supporters were on a hill nearby when EFF members emerged from their meeting and began singing.

Some of the ANC group began throwing stones at them and police intervened using truncheons, a water canon and tear gas. Rubber bullets were fired and people ran and dived for cover.

A number of ANC supporters were then arrested and loaded into the back of a public order policing van. One stuck his middle finger out of the van before it drove off.

Captain Thulani Zwane said 30 people were arrested and would appear in the Nkandla Magistrate's Court on Monday to face charges of public violence.

ANC members earlier blocked the road leading to the house and prevented EFF leader Julius Malema's car from driving past. Malema then got out of the car and walked through the crowd to get to the house.

After he made it through, ANC supporters began throwing bottles of water and stones.

Malema was visiting the area to mark the EFF's handing over of a house its members had built for Sthandiwe Hlongwane and her grandchildren.

The house has two bedrooms, a kitchen, a shower room and a septic tank, and stands about 300 metres from Zuma's home. The party also provided furniture for the house.

Malema said that attempts to stop him visiting Hlongwane's house were unconstitutional.

“I am not Democratic Alliance leader (Helen Zille), I cannot be blocked,” he said.

Zuma's son Edward was among the ANC supporters who turned out, but was not one of those arrested.

“Not even Edward's father succeeded in stopping me,” he said. 

- Sapa

Zuma shielded against the boos

Extraordinary security measures were put in place as the ANC pulled out all the stops to avert another booing incident as President Jacob Zuma launched his party‘s election manifesto in Nelspruit yesterday.
Thousands of party supporters who attended the rally had to be preregistered and sit according to the provinces they came from as part of precautionary measures.

On Friday, Performance, Monitoring and Evaluation Minister Collins Chabane and his state security counterpart, Siyabonga Cwele, met disgruntled residents living near the Mbombela Stadium amid fears the community was planning to disrupt the event yesterday.

These unusual steps were taken in the light of the booing of Zuma at Nelson Mandela‘s memorial service at Johannesburg‘s FNB Stadium last month.

 That incident exposed deep-seated unhappiness among ANC voters about Zuma‘s leadership and the taxpayer-funded R208-million upgrade of his Nkandla homestead.

State security agencies were involved in the measures.

“This time around we are well prepared,” said an intelligence source involved in the planning. “We know where every bus comes from, and who the passengers are.

“The people were seated as provincial delegations so that it becomes easier to isolate and deal with any trouble.”

A Sunday Times survey last month found that 51% of traditional ANC voters wanted Zuma to step down, and preferred another presidential candidate in the coming election.

But the ANC used yesterday‘s rally to show Zuma as still being hugely popular. Party leaders such as national chairwoman Baleka Mbete went out of their way to highlight his popularity.

Mbete reminded the crowd that Zuma was re-elected as ANC president by a huge majority at its previous national congress in December 2012.

“The people who re-elected him were wide awake when they did so,” said Mbete.

A day earlier, at the gala ANC dinner, Justice Minister Jeff Radebe devoted a large part of his introductory remarks to singing Zuma‘s praises.

Radebe highlighted Zuma‘s struggle credentials, from his 10 years on Robben Island to his work for the ANC in exile.

Zuma appeared much more confident, jovially dancing to struggle songs and interacting with national executive committee (NEC) members.

As opposed to the scenes at the Mandela memorial, yesterday‘s partisan crowd clapped and cheered.

Zuma delivered electoral promises, which included:

  • Six million “job opportunities”;
  • A million “housing opportunities”;
  • 1000 new schools;
  • The roll-out of the National Health Insurance beyond the pilot phase; and
  • Cheaper private healthcare.
  • Zuma promised a clean government that would deal decisively with corruption.

“Public servants and public representatives will be prohibited from doing business with the state, and further measures will be developed to identify and prosecute corrupt actions by public servants and others.

“The ANC is very clear that actions that bring our organisation into disrepute will not be tolerated.”

He also talked tough against ill-discipline in the party.

“We repeat that we shall use all the measures agreed to at the 53rd conference to deal with instances of ill-discipline.”

But with Cosatu now divided, Zuma urged members of the federation to stay in the ANC.

“We must all work harder to guard against certain destructive and opportunistic elements that are trying to divide this alliance partner and our movement.”

Zuma was referring to a decision by Cosatu‘s largest affiliate, Numsa, to withdraw its support for the ruling party in this year‘s general election.

Numsa‘s withdrawal is a big blow to the ANC, whose traditional support base of black middle-class voters and the poor is being contested by new political formations such as Julius Malema‘s Economic Freedom Fighters and Agang SA, led by Mamphela Ramphele.

ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu acknowledged that the party had discussed with its branches the need to ensure that there would be no booing at the stadium, but said that he was not aware of state security involvement.

“State agencies would do nothing about incidents of this nature. We talk politics and discipline to ANC members and supporters,” he said.

While Zuma was being feted in Nelspruit, his bête noire, Malema, was hailed as a champion of the poor by the president‘s neighbours in Nkandla, reports Bongani Mthethwa.

Villagers at KwaNxamalala in KwaZulu-Natal cheered Malema soon after his hostile reception from ANC members in the area, including Zuma‘s eldest son, Edward. They threw plastic bottles, sticks and stones at Malema‘s motorcade as it entered the village before being dispersed by police, who fired rubber bullets and tear gas, and sprayed them with water.

Armed police created a barricade around Malema, and escorted him into the village, where he was to hand over a three-bedroomed home to Standiwe Hlongwane, 31, and her two children. This is less than a kilometre from Zuma‘s homestead.

Malema criticised the government‘s slow pace in building low-cost houses. He said the government had built Zuma a palatial home, while millions of people lived in shacks.

“Any African who stays in a beautiful house like that and his neighbours stay in these shacks must be ashamed. Especially a person who has been elected by yourselves.

“He took your money and built a big house and even built a fence so that you can‘t access him. But when we were voting for him they said he is the man of the people but he has closed you outside,” said Malema.

Families, including Zuma‘s relatives, flocked around Malema, begging him to build them homes and create jobs.

Nkandla municipality, in which KwaNxamalala is situated, has a shortage of 14688 homes, according to the municipality‘s housing plan.

Among the villagers was Hlengiwe Zondi, 35, who abandoned her dilapidated rondavel about two months ago.

Her small plot, which has a rondavel and hut to store her belongings, is separated by a high security fence from

Zuma‘s homestead. “I‘m envious ... that [Hlongwane] family is poor like me. I am very happy for them,” she said.

Zondi, who has a support grant for her two children, said she had attempted to approach the president to help her repair her home. “On January 2, I walked right up to Zuma‘s gate, but could not get in to meet him because there were already a number of people visiting,” she said. “I‘m not asking Zuma to build me a home, but just to see that I‘m suffering. Sometimes my children go to bed hungry [and] that hurts.”

One of Zuma‘s relatives, Nsizwenye Zuma, 32, had waited since 6am yesterday to see Malema.

ANC supporters, who stopped to watch the EFF members hard at work, often chanted: “Angeke simlahle uNxmalala. Angeke simlahle uKhongolose” [We won‘t abandon the president. We won‘t abandon the ANC].”

Saturday, January 11, 2014

ANC swigs Nkandla Kool Aid

The governing party's most senior members believe they can limit the Nkandla damage and win votes ahead of the upcoming elections.
ANC national executive committee members are resigned to defending Nkandla and other contentious issues ahead of the elections. The party's top leadership is either firmly on President Jacob Zuma's side or doing what it can to spin the issue to ensure the ANC gets voted in, the Mail & Guardian has learned.

"Now, as we sit, we can't wish away that we had to build a security upgrade for the president and put up infrastructure and so on," said one NEC member.

He added that a revolt against Zuma over the matter from within the party is unlikely. "Zuma is the face of the party; he is the face of the campaign. You can't change that at this stage."

Senior ANC leader Lindiwe Zulu said after the meeting on Thursday that the party's top brass are happy with Zuma's explanation that he did not personally ask for the upgrades – the government had. She also criticised public protector Thuli Madonsela for ignoring the findings of the government's interministerial task team report when she investigated the matter.

Madonsela's provisional report, leaked to the media late last year, found that he benefited personally from the R206-million upgrades.

Nkandla report
Zulu said the ANC will push for Madonsela's report to be released as soon as possible. She said the party does not expect Madonsela's final report to touch on security matters. 

"The security element cannot be debated. There are certain elements that can't be discussed at all."

She said the ANC will do every­thing in its power to defend the interministerial recommendations that clear Zuma and target senior government officials, including former public works deputy minister Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu and former public works minister Geoff Doidge.

Bogopane-Zulu, who is now deputy minister for women, children and people with disabilities, last month disputed the findings of the interministerial report, which recommended that she and Doidge should be investigated. He is currently South Africa's ambassador to Sri Lanka.

Addressing journalists at the Mbombela Stadium in Nelspruit on Thursday, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe reiterated his view that, if Madonsela failed to release the report before the elections, her conduct would be read as political. He said the report has been a long time coming and the party is keen to read it.

"The public protector has been working on that report for a long time; we don't expect her to take another six months."

Timing is key
Mantashe said the party would be suspicious if the timing of the report's release seemed dubious.

"If the public protector releases it close to the elections, we will actually assume it will be intended to tilt the balance of forces in the election," he warned during the question-and-answer session.

"It will be intended to muddy the waters in the election campaign."

He also went off script earlier in the briefing to make other remarks about Madonsela.

"Our understanding is that these two state institutions must be reading from the same set of facts and, if there are divergent determinations made and findings, it is an issue that will be of interest and we will have to interrogate," said Mantashe.

Madonsela has previously said she would be ready to release the final report by the end of January.

No choice
The M&G this week also spoke to two other ANC NEC members who attended the meeting, but they wanted to remain anonymous as they were not authorised to speak to the media. But they indicated that the ANC did not have any choice but to defend its president.

A number of NEC members went into the meeting seeking explanations about the Nkandla upgrade.

"Our biggest concern was: Was public money spent?" the member said. "They showed us a breakdown of expenses."

He added that there is greater ease about the matter now.

Regarding Nkandla, the NEC members the M&G spoke to were confident that nothing was untoward – or at least said they were resigned to dedicating themselves to clarifying the public relations nightmare to the electorate before the elections.

"There are certain negativities that have arisen," they said. "It is our job to address those when we campaign."

Contentious e-tolls
The same applies to other contentious issues for the ANC, including the unpopular e-tolls in Gauteng.

Discussions by the NEC earlier this week in Nelspruit seem to have convinced members that the strategy for dealing with these election issues is to spin the matters effectively, convincing the public that they aren't as bad as they seem.

But there has been a backlash from some against Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi and others involved in communicating with the public over the Nkandla upgrade.

"Those guys are terrible communicators … There has been miscommunication or sometimes over-communication from them," said the member.

"Now it is up to the party to go out and communicate."

Fire pool
Another NEC member said that the matter of the controversial "fire pool" had been addressed and they were told it is simply a concrete hole in the ground to store water for fire-fighting, as a bucket does not have the capacity to carry that much water – 40 000 litres was the figure they were given.

"You can't swim in that," the second member said. "One of the ministers was saying to us, when she went there with the public protector, the pool had algae."

One likened it more to a pit, although another cautioned that, not being engineers, they could not say for sure. But again, the consensus was that poor communication has surrounded the issue and the NEC members have resolved to work to "help the public understand".

Zulu said the ANC had no choice but to support the government on the implementation of the e-tolls.

"The ANC took a firm decision on e-tolls. We must explain why the decision to implement the e-tolls to the people. Sanral must implement them [the e-tolls] properly. They must not put the ANC in a difficult position. It is their job to do that," said Zulu.

- M&G

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Govt paying Nkandla power bill?

With Public Protector Thuli Madonsela’s Nkandla report expected to be released this month, a new controversy over the spending at President Jacob Zuma's private Nkandla residence has erupted, this time over electricity costs. 

Madonsela has been investigating how over R200-million was spent on upgrades at Zuma’s Nkandla home and plans to make her findings public within the next few weeks. 

The Department of Public Works is being pushed in Parliament to answer questions about how much money is being spent on electricity at Nkandla. 

The Democratic Alliance says it has received parliamentary answers which suggest government is picking up the bill, but is claiming it's security related. 

The opposition party has vowed to resubmit a fresh round of questions to get the exact details. 

Late last year, government made public the findings of its own report into the Nkandla spending which cleared Zuma of any wrongdoing, but found numerous irregularities. 

It remains to be seen whether security concerns over Madonsela’s report will be resolved in time for her to release her findings this month. 

Government’s findings on Nkandla is in direct contrast to those contained in a leaked draft of Madonsela's report. 

The protector’s interim report, with the working title "Opulence on a grand scale", was published in the Mail & Guardian in November. 

The provisional document found that President Zuma received "substantial personal benefit" from upgrades which exceeded his security requirements. 

It called for the president to pay back some of the R208-million spent on upgrades. 

The draft document also called on him to account to Parliament. 

Madonsela's report raised serious questions about the architect, who was in constant contact with the president during renovations. 

According to a government report on the issue released on 19 December, Public Works Minister Thulas Nxesi says there's no truth to allegations that Zuma abused state resources. 

The report, which was compiled a year ago, did find there was overcharging and collusion between companies involved in the upgrades. 

Furthermore, the document claims Zuma did not ask for the upgrades and had no idea how much they cost. 

The minister says the Auditor General's office and the Special Investigating Unit will now carry out forensic probes into tender and contract irregularities.

- EWN

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Valhalla fire victims rehoused

Cape Town - Residents of Agstelaan informal settlement in Valhalla Park who were left homeless after a fire in the area last month have been rehoused, the City of Cape Town said on Monday.

“The primary beneficiaries have all been accommodated according to a formal layout that will ultimately house all 600 families in the informal settlement,” Cape Town's disaster risk management centre spokesman Wilfred Solomons-Johannes said in a statement.

The layout plan was developed according to the city's Upgrading of Informal Settlement Programme (UISP).

The programme will see each family getting access to piped water, flush toilets, prepaid electricity and wheelie bin services, Solomons-Johannes said.

Construction should begin in October. The families were currently placed on their allocated sites with temporary water standpipes and portable flush toilets. Electricity was due to be installed shortly, he said.

“The other families in the informal settlements who have not been affected by the fire will also be relocated to their improved housing sites.”

Solomons-Johannes said 276 primary beneficiaries and 13 backyard dwellers in the informal settlement had been assisted, including five backyard dwellers in the formal area.

The formal houses that were affected were being dealt with by their respective insurance companies.

On December 23 more than 1500 people were left destitute when a fire ripped through the informal settlement. Residents staged a protest on Boxing Day.

Cape Town mayor Patricia de Lille said in a statement at the time that a housing database was being used to provide housing opportunities for any particular group.

De Lille said the SA Social Security Agency (Sassa) would also visit the site to do biometric verification of all grant beneficiaries and that the city was working with the department of home affairs to facilitate the reissuing of identity documents lost in the fire. - Sapa

His Master's Voice Wins "Nkandla Fire Pool" Media Statement of the Year Award

Isn't it about time we created an annual journalism award - with apologies to Gareth van Onselen who thinks we have too many as it is - that will recognise, praise and honour in perpetuity the year's most outrageous Comical Ali statement in a media context?

"We must hold Thulas Nxesi, Siyabonga Cwele, Jeff Radebe and all the members of the so-called security cluster responsible for the Nkandla report in their individual capacities.

"They must be reminded that we will always remember how they sat and, with straight faces, vomited "fire pool", "retaining wall" (with amphitheatre features), tuck shop, chicken run and all sorts of things reserved only for people capable of seeing angels at Madiba's memorial. We will always remember". - Bloke Monnafela, by e-mail, Sunday Times letter page 29/12/2013

One word, "Nkandla", has so come to dominate our political and public discourse that I suggested it form part of a new verb, "Nkandla'd" meaning 'to subvert the course of justice by using the Zuma faction's "Stalingrad" approach (and huge amounts of public money) to cover up corruption and to prevent the consequences of such exposure.'

Despite the best efforts of Hlaudi Motsoeneng, Jimi Matthews and Nyana Molete to censor the news of President Jacob Zuma being booed on the world stage, public outrage about the pervasive, systemic and institutionalised corruption by the Zuma faction of the ANC is growing - as is manifest in Bloke Monnafela's quote, which anchors this column, the open letter by Dr Barney Pityana urging President Jacob Zuma to resign, the Numsa breakaway, e-toll defiance, the Sunday Times poll which showed that the majority of people interviewed wanted Zuma to step down, daily service delivery protests and the depreciating rand as an indicator of investor confidence.

I therefore thought that this was the appropriate time to create an annual journalism award - with apologies to Gareth van Onselen who thinks we have too many as it is - that will recognise, praise and honour in perpetuity the year's most outrageous Comical Ali statement in a media context.

Searching for an award title

To qualify, the statement must seethe with contempt for the intelligence of all South Africans and I was looking for a name for the competition, something emblematic, something that all South Africans would instantly equate with a brazen lie. As Bloke Monnafela's letter to the Sunday Times suggests, the surreal Nkandla "fire pool" with its integral, re-invented "bucket system" is thus completely deserving of becoming the leitmotif, the symbol and the title of this prestigious award...

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Cops keep a close watch on Nkandla

Police say they are keeping a close watch on President Jacob Zuma's home at Nkandla in northern KwaZulu-Natal, after an argument between Julius Malema's Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) and the African Nation Congress (ANC).

A clash was narrowly averted when ANC members confronted EFF members who are building a house for a woman a stone's throw away from Zuma's Nkandla residence.

Police spokesperson Thulani Zwane says the police in the area are keeping an eye on the situation.

“The situation is back to normal at Nkandla area after there was a misunderstanding between two groups over a house that is being built in the area. The police are doing their patrol in the area but there is no case open and the situation is back to normal. No one was assaulted or attacked and nothing was destroyed,” adds Zwane.

- SABC

Friday, January 3, 2014

Nkandla's weakest link is its chimney

A complaint to the public protector has exposed a possible fire hazard at President Jacob Zuma's homestead.

It took three security agencies, an army of contractors and at least R71-million to secure President Jacob Zuma's homestead in Nkandla, according to a government fact-finding exercise. Fire protection alone saw the construction of both a reservoir and a "fire pool", which has a remarkable resemblance to a swimming pool. But all of that missed what may be the biggest and most glaring threat to the safety of the president, a complaint lodged with the public protector this week says: a chimney that is far too short.

"It is absolutely elementary," says social worker John Clarke, who is responsible for the latest formal complaint relating to the more than R200-million of taxpayer funds spent on Zuma's Nkandla residence. "Thirty years ago they taught us that thatched roofs need to be specially dealt with. You don't need to be an architect to see that."

The supposed chimney on the roof of one of the main structures of the compound, Clarke says, is too short. This presents a clear fire hazard, which should, by rights, have been detected and rectified during the work of the interministerial task team that investigated public spending at Nkandla. But the formerly top-secret report compiled by that task team and released in December takes no notice of the clear and present danger. That, Clarke told the public protector in a complaint lodged on Thursday, "suggests that President Zuma may be more at risk from the apparent incompetence of members of his own Cabinet than any external threat".

And if the chimney is really a chimney – which is not as obvious as it may appear amid the Byzantine complexity that is Nkandla – that argument could hold some merit.

Building regulations
South African building regulations set complex rules for the construction of safe chimneys, but do not set standards specific to highly combustible thatched roofs. Those who deal with chimneys and thatch have a simple rule of thumb, however: build tall chimneys, certainly taller than what appears to be a chimney in the Nkandla complex.

One fireplace company recommends that a chimney on thatch should extend past the apex of the roof by at least 600mm, another that the difference in height should be no less than a metre. One thatching company says chimneys "should be well above the highest point of the thatch", another that there should be at least 1.8m of clearance from the top of the chimney stack to the closest thatch in any direction. None recommends what appears to be the case in Nkandla, which is a chimney-like structure well below the line of thatch, regardless of other safety mechanisms such as spark arrestors.

The supposed Nkandla chimney also appears to fail to comply with regulations that apply to all roofs, even those not so likely to catch fire as to require a fire pool, said John Graham, the chief executive of inspection company HouseCheck, after examining photographs supplied by the Mail & Guardian.

One regulation, Graham said, "states that the height of any chimney outlet must be 1 000mm above the highest point of contact of the chimney [the base of the chimney stack] and the roof covering [and] at least 600mm above the ridge line of a pitched roof; the top of the chimney stack must also be at least 1 000mm from the roof covering [measured horizontally]. The chimney on the main building in your picture fails on all three of these specs."

That is aside from possible problems with lightning arrestors and the proximity of other thatched dwellings. But in a twist that building regulations do not normally need to consider, the chimney may not be a chimney at all, according to documents relating to Nkandla previously published by the M&G. It could, instead, be part of an elaborate defence against chemical or biological weapons.

In the early stages of the security project in 2009, the documents show, a proposal was presented on providing a filtered air supply to the secure section of a tunnel complex beneath the compound, a supply that could withstand a gas attack. Part of the proposal included an "air intake" that was to be "concealed as a high chimney at the main house".

The documents are not clear on whether the proposal was ever accepted, and it remains unknown whether the chimney functions as a chimney.

- M&G

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Family helpless as boy, 4, burns to death

Cape Town - Joseph Leibrandt dashed to rescue his grandson David Matthews, 4, from a burning shack in the Egoli informal settlement near Grassy Park, but the flames were too fierce for him to save the boy.

Ten shacks were razed by the fire – believed to have been started by a candle – leaving 40 people homeless.

David’s mother, Shireen Mathews, 27, awoke at about 2am on Tuesday and found the shack in which she was sleeping with two children was on fire. She rushed out with her younger child, Ursulla, to get help from her parents, who lived next door.

Leibrandt hurried to the shack to try to save David.

“It was too late. The blaze was too strong and flames were coming out of the door. I tried all I could, but it was too late. I suffered burns trying to save him,” Leibrandt said.

“His mother knocked at the door and she was shouting that her shack was on fire. The side where the bed was had burned completely,” he said.

He suspected the candle was the cause of the fire.

“We have no electrical connections. We use candles and it is sad because we have been staying here for almost 30 years now. The candle fell and the fire started,” said Leibrandt.

“The shack was made of cardboard and plastic, that’s why this happened too fast.”

David’s grandmother, Mildren Leibrandt, 51, said: “Everything was already destroyed when the firefighters arrived.

“David was taken out of the shack already dead. He was a lovely boy.

“I can’t even describe how we feel.”

When the Cape Times went to the scene on Wednesday, residents were helping to rebuild the shack, while the family were gathered at the Leibrandts’ home.

Matthews was in shock and could not be interviewed.

In Valhalla Park, residents who lost their homes in a fire early last week say they are planning to petition the City of Cape Town about the quantity of building materials they have been given, which they say is inadequate.

Each household has been given 25 corrugated sheets, one window, one door and about 15 planks to build temporary structures.

The fire destroyed 350 homes, leaving about 1 400 people homeless.

siyavuya.mzantsi@inl.co.za