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ANC Tshwane boss threatened to collapse council during waste tender contract interests saga, police told

ANC regional secretary George Matjila allegedly warned Tshwane’s head of finance to cancel a waste collection improvement plan or face a motion of no confidence to oust the mayor.
ANC Tshwane boss threatened to collapse council during waste tender contract interests saga, police told The ANC’s Tshwane regional secretary, George Matjila, allegedly warned Tshwane’s finance boss, Jacqui Uys, that the party would move to collapse the council in a motion of no confidence if she did not reverse a plan to tighten the city’s multimillion-rand contracts to collect waste. Pretoria is a dirty city — its municipal waste management capacity has been eroded over years of cadre deployment and mismanagement. Waste management has been outsourced and is a honeycomb for often ANC-linked tenderpreneurs who benefit from the budgeted R700-million annual contracts. “It’s open knowledge that Mr Matjila had a vested interest in the preceding Waste Management Tender,” said Uys in an affidavit signed at the Garsfontein Police Station in Pretoria on 17 July. “This is borne out by the fact that on several occasions Mr Matjila personally demanded that outstanding invoices be immediately settled by the city so that could ‘pay his people’.  “This interest appears to have continued with the award of the new tender, save for the fact that conditions attached thereto preclude him from benefiting.”   Uys has asked for a police investigation into attempted corruption in terms of section 21 of the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act. [caption id="attachment_2216408" align="alignnone" width="2000"]tshwane budget uys Tshwane finance MMC Jacqui Uys. (Photo: Neil McCartney / The Citizen)[/caption] “I don’t have any contract with the city,” said Matjila when asked by Daily Maverick. He confirmed calling Uys. “Me and Jacqui, the MMC, have a cordial relationship and we speak from time to time. I did call Jacqui and she never answered. I sent her a WhatsApp. She called back and I told her about a group of township subcontractors who stormed our ANC lekgotla. “They wanted to see the mayor. She said she would arrange that and said we can meet around 3pm the following day. I said it’s impossible as we’re attending our lekgotla. That’s what happened,” said Matjila. The meeting was never held as the ANC threatened a motion of no confidence last week. While Matjila denies business interests, Uys has confirmed these in the affidavit. Officials in the city and from the ANC say it is open knowledge that Matjila has subcontracts with Tshwane in water tankering (focused on Hammanskraal), waste management and security. While Matjila and Uys both confirmed cordial relations, it is irregular for party bosses to call political office bearers or staff to advance their own or allied business interests. The Tshwane council is DA-led under Mayor Cilliers Brink. The DA holds 69 seats to the ANC’s 75, and the coalition is fragile and can collapse under any pressure.

No city for old trucks

Service delivery in Tshwane, like that in Johannesburg, is often near collapse in chaotic coalitions struck in 2021 when no parties won governing majorities in the local government elections. Waste management is an arena where political contestation usually plays out, like a damaging strike in 2023 (see this report). This month, City Manager Johann Mettler introduced a new waste management contract for providers. It included three new rules: no truck can be older than nine years old and all must have a valid registration licence (about 70% of previous contractors could not produce one) and a GPS. That led to the no-confidence motion threat because most contractors didn’t make the grade. The city also tightened subcontracting rules, as political interests are veiled when beneficial ownership is unclear. “On the first day of deployment, vehicles were inspected and only qualifying ones were allowed to work. But many of the subcontractors were not willing to adhere to the subcontracting conditions. They blocked some landfill sites and escalated intimidation,” said the City of Tshwane on 22 July, adding that a contractor’s truck had been pelted with stones in Mamelodi on the way to a landfill. “Old trucks break down and [we] suffer these frequently,” said Tshwane spokesperson Selby Bokaba. Tracking was vital because a line of sight was essential for outsourced services. Bokaba said the 2023 strike had shown that waste managers told communities that refuse had been collected when it had not been. The city pays by tonnage and loads, and the tracking would allow better auditing. “There’s no room to manoeuvre or cheat,” he said. In addition, when trucks caused damage, the city had to pay, and better controls would cut these costs. Ekurhuleni and Johannesburg only contract with owners of waste trucks that are not older than three or five years.

Waste is a gold mine

Tshwane’s city council has a budget of R50.6-billion and it is stretched to plug gaps, deal with infrastructure breakdowns and accommodate a rapidly growing population. It spends R12-billion a year on staff and another R4-billion on contracted services. The city is supposed to provide these services, but because of its rundown administration outsourcing has become the norm.  Over decades, ANC-linked tenderpreneurs in Johannesburg, Ekurhuleni and Tshwane have commandeered contracts for waste, water tankering and security in all three cities. This, say insiders, explains why the GNU power-sharing concept failed in Gauteng, where Premier Panyaza Lesufi refused to strike a regional deal to replicate the national plan. Regional secretaries like Matjila put the kibosh on a provincial unity government, they say. Read more: Provincial capture wins as Panyaza Lesufi goes his own way in Gauteng Contracting is huge money, but it also explains why the cities are all buckling under financial strain and applying administered prices (like electricity tariffs), plunging their citizens into a cost-of-living crisis. It explains why the ANC’s vote share in Gauteng splattered to only 34% in the May election, say party insiders who want the system cleaned up. Tshwane spends R680-million a year on contracted-out waste management and R378-million on contracting with water tanker companies. In budget documents, the city says it wants to reduce contracted services costs by investing in capital expenditure. But officials say this will ignite more “trip-wires” as politically connected business forums lose out.  Matjila is a powerful regional ANC boss who controls Tshwane. In 2016, City Press reported that he was allegedly the mastermind behind city protests that brought the capital to a standstill because of opposition to the mooted appointment of Thoko Didiza as mayor. DM

The ANC’s Tshwane regional secretary, George Matjila, allegedly warned Tshwane’s finance boss, Jacqui Uys, that the party would move to collapse the council in a motion of no confidence if she did not reverse a plan to tighten the city’s multimillion-rand contracts to collect waste.

Pretoria is a dirty city — its municipal waste management capacity has been eroded over years of cadre deployment and mismanagement. Waste management has been outsourced and is a honeycomb for often ANC-linked tenderpreneurs who benefit from the budgeted R700-million annual contracts.

“It’s open knowledge that Mr Matjila had a vested interest in the preceding Waste Management Tender,” said Uys in an affidavit signed at the Garsfontein Police Station in Pretoria on 17 July.

“This is borne out by the fact that on several occasions Mr Matjila personally demanded that outstanding invoices be immediately settled by the city so that could ‘pay his people’. 

“This interest appears to have continued with the award of the new tender, save for the fact that conditions attached thereto preclude him from benefiting.”  

Uys has asked for a police investigation into attempted corruption in terms of section 21 of the Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act.

tshwane budget uys Tshwane finance MMC Jacqui Uys. (Photo: Neil McCartney / The Citizen)



“I don’t have any contract with the city,” said Matjila when asked by Daily Maverick.

He confirmed calling Uys.

“Me and Jacqui, the MMC, have a cordial relationship and we speak from time to time. I did call Jacqui and she never answered. I sent her a WhatsApp. She called back and I told her about a group of township subcontractors who stormed our ANC lekgotla.

“They wanted to see the mayor. She said she would arrange that and said we can meet around 3pm the following day. I said it’s impossible as we’re attending our lekgotla. That’s what happened,” said Matjila.

The meeting was never held as the ANC threatened a motion of no confidence last week. While Matjila denies business interests, Uys has confirmed these in the affidavit.

Officials in the city and from the ANC say it is open knowledge that Matjila has subcontracts with Tshwane in water tankering (focused on Hammanskraal), waste management and security.

While Matjila and Uys both confirmed cordial relations, it is irregular for party bosses to call political office bearers or staff to advance their own or allied business interests.

The Tshwane council is DA-led under Mayor Cilliers Brink. The DA holds 69 seats to the ANC’s 75, and the coalition is fragile and can collapse under any pressure.

No city for old trucks


Service delivery in Tshwane, like that in Johannesburg, is often near collapse in chaotic coalitions struck in 2021 when no parties won governing majorities in the local government elections.

Waste management is an arena where political contestation usually plays out, like a damaging strike in 2023 (see this report). This month, City Manager Johann Mettler introduced a new waste management contract for providers. It included three new rules: no truck can be older than nine years old and all must have a valid registration licence (about 70% of previous contractors could not produce one) and a GPS.

That led to the no-confidence motion threat because most contractors didn’t make the grade. The city also tightened subcontracting rules, as political interests are veiled when beneficial ownership is unclear.

“On the first day of deployment, vehicles were inspected and only qualifying ones were allowed to work. But many of the subcontractors were not willing to adhere to the subcontracting conditions. They blocked some landfill sites and escalated intimidation,” said the City of Tshwane on 22 July, adding that a contractor’s truck had been pelted with stones in Mamelodi on the way to a landfill.

“Old trucks break down and [we] suffer these frequently,” said Tshwane spokesperson Selby Bokaba.

Tracking was vital because a line of sight was essential for outsourced services. Bokaba said the 2023 strike had shown that waste managers told communities that refuse had been collected when it had not been. The city pays by tonnage and loads, and the tracking would allow better auditing.

“There’s no room to manoeuvre or cheat,” he said.

In addition, when trucks caused damage, the city had to pay, and better controls would cut these costs. Ekurhuleni and Johannesburg only contract with owners of waste trucks that are not older than three or five years.

Waste is a gold mine


Tshwane’s city council has a budget of R50.6-billion and it is stretched to plug gaps, deal with infrastructure breakdowns and accommodate a rapidly growing population.

It spends R12-billion a year on staff and another R4-billion on contracted services. The city is supposed to provide these services, but because of its rundown administration outsourcing has become the norm. 

Over decades, ANC-linked tenderpreneurs in Johannesburg, Ekurhuleni and Tshwane have commandeered contracts for waste, water tankering and security in all three cities.

This, say insiders, explains why the GNU power-sharing concept failed in Gauteng, where Premier Panyaza Lesufi refused to strike a regional deal to replicate the national plan. Regional secretaries like Matjila put the kibosh on a provincial unity government, they say.

Read more: Provincial capture wins as Panyaza Lesufi goes his own way in Gauteng

Contracting is huge money, but it also explains why the cities are all buckling under financial strain and applying administered prices (like electricity tariffs), plunging their citizens into a cost-of-living crisis.

It explains why the ANC’s vote share in Gauteng splattered to only 34% in the May election, say party insiders who want the system cleaned up.

Tshwane spends R680-million a year on contracted-out waste management and R378-million on contracting with water tanker companies.

In budget documents, the city says it wants to reduce contracted services costs by investing in capital expenditure. But officials say this will ignite more “trip-wires” as politically connected business forums lose out. 

Matjila is a powerful regional ANC boss who controls Tshwane. In 2016, City Press reported that he was allegedly the mastermind behind city protests that brought the capital to a standstill because of opposition to the mooted appointment of Thoko Didiza as mayor. DM

Comments

Kevin Venter Jul 23, 2024, 02:43 AM

Time to call in Velenkosini Hlabisa to order an investigation into the money trail. It is time to bring all the corrupt individuals who have been double dipping (getting paid salary as well as doing business with the state) onto the scales of justice. Oom Piet is going to need more prisons.

lesley.young1945 Jul 23, 2024, 02:50 PM

Absolutely!

Joe FER Sep 5, 2024, 11:24 AM

Now they can't steal from the R700mil budget... that is only reason why is upset!!

Johnny Kessel Jul 23, 2024, 06:22 AM

This is what happens when you make an entire class of people dependant on government, Instead of creating an industry, they create Cartels where competition is an anathema. Threaten it, they go ballistic and burn down the barn and the horse that feeds. Eventually the gravy train runs out of coal.

J vN Jul 23, 2024, 06:49 AM

It is also what happens when those who've never had a culture of managerial excellence, honesty, accountability and integrity, suddenly get given a modern country to run.

Podu Kgomo Jul 23, 2024, 12:52 PM

This comment was fair until you mentioned people suddenly being given a modern country to run. That for me, sounds a bit loaded. Loaded with racial innuendo. If I'm wrong, then I'm wrong.

Johann Olivier Jul 23, 2024, 05:43 PM

... and if at all true, ask why? Too many folks were denied the basic opportunities to perhaps sharpen those skills. So, where does the true blame lie?

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Jul 23, 2024, 11:07 PM

We need to be honest. Apartheid had explicitly denied our people the education needed to run the infrastructure when South Africa was handed over. This is not an indication of African failing, it is simply the truth. 30 wasted years later we need to aggressively correct it - together.

Indeed Jhb Jul 24, 2024, 05:51 PM

Fanie, sorry have to disagree a bit. If the people who could run the infrastructure were retained to learn from instead of being replaced by ANC cadres it would have been a different story. But as you say, we wasted 30 years and we now have evidence that ANC policies were/are rubbish.

Pieter van de Venter Jul 30, 2024, 11:25 AM

Fanie, you are way off. Remember the municipalities in the 1980's that were funded via Regional Taxes on businesses - percentage of payroll and sales? The ANC went out to destroy those municipalities and murder the councillors. That was the chance to learn!!!

Joe FER Sep 5, 2024, 11:22 AM

Fanie , You clearly sitting the pot miss. Schools/ infrastructures was build and ANC & their "comrades"broke them down as quickly they where build. I have seem this every week when my dad had to go back and fix it!!! The apartheid government spend millions on their education and they ...!!!

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Jul 23, 2024, 11:14 PM

And at the same time we need to fight together for law and its proper enforcement - in all our rainbow colours.

Dermot Quinn Jul 23, 2024, 09:23 AM

With ex Min Patel so hell bent on corporates being held to account in the Competition arena, one immediately wonders where he is/was in this regard... Our time to eat, gorge whatever it is called. Rates continue to rise with no solution...how can average Joe push back?

manie1974 Jul 23, 2024, 06:37 AM

It is strange that outsourcing became the norm. That should be an option in exceptional instances not when administration fails. The article does not delve into why the service delivery failed in the first place and the accountability and/ or consequence management applied.

Karl Sittlinger Jul 23, 2024, 07:21 AM

Generally what happens is that the tender goes to someone with little or no experience at inflated cost, who then has to contract an external service provider to do the actual work.

Johnny Kessel Jul 23, 2024, 02:29 PM

And with that reality those providers don't have any incentive to reinvest their capital in maintenance and improvements and end up with trucks that break down, as is the case here. Multiply that across all required services and you end up with a collapsed municipality Socialism, the final frontier

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 09:30 AM

2nd paragraph - 'Pretoria is a dirty city', corruption, cadre deployment, don't think you need to go much further than that, especially when the rest of the article details it?

J vN Jul 23, 2024, 06:48 AM

Stealing and corruption. It's just who they are.

Ashley Stone Jul 23, 2024, 08:49 AM

Story of the scorpion and the frog come to mind.

Debbie.ann Jul 23, 2024, 07:06 AM

Clearly the only way out of this conundrum is for the municipal management to gradually phase in their own infrastructure and wean council of sub contractors. A great job creation programme too.

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 09:32 AM

The problem is that throughout SA, the same scenario is playing out - local mafias destroying municipal infrastructure so they can provide the 'services' at inflated prices. Those destroying infrastructure need to be given a minimum of 15 years jail; the mafias - treason charges.

Old Man Jul 23, 2024, 07:08 AM

"This month, City Manager Johann Mettler introduced a new waste management contract for providers. It included three new rules: no truck can be older than nine years old and all must have a valid registration licence (about 70% of previous contractors could not produce one) and a GPS." Compare this to the coal mafia at Eskom. The DA is following the lessons learnt from the experiences there. Why is the ANC complaining or is it just a massive bad apple.

Nick Griffon Jul 23, 2024, 07:54 AM

The ANC is complaining because high ranking ANC officials are involved. In waste tender contracts, in water tanker contracts and in coal transport contracts.

Ashley Stone Jul 23, 2024, 08:49 AM

Exactly.

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 09:33 AM

Spot on.

Niek Joubert Jul 23, 2024, 07:49 AM

And just this morning, on a discussion on RSG radio, a so-called political analyst (Oscar van Heerden) alleged that the motion of no-confidence is in the offing because of Cilliers Brink's failures in Tswane, e.g. the Rooiwal water purification project.

Eunice van Wyk Jul 23, 2024, 09:14 AM

He clearly did not know what he was talking about!

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 09:34 AM

Oscar van Heerden is a card-carrying member of the ANC and has admitted his bias on radio before, when discussing his book. He's hardly an independent analyst!

hedley.davids Jul 23, 2024, 07:49 AM

Until some of the low hanging industrial scale looters ( identified at the Zondo commission ) are prosecuted , and put in jail for 20 years without any chance of parole the corruption will continue . It has become boring waiting for lifestyle audits - the chirade continues

Niek Joubert Jul 23, 2024, 07:52 AM

....and the cholera outbreak. Van Heerden is clearly not objective. Commentators from UJ should be treated with circumspection.

Eunice van Wyk Jul 23, 2024, 09:15 AM

I agree!

jbest67 Jul 23, 2024, 07:59 AM

I am extremely happy to see our country in the hands of the GNU. DA is the best party in SA in terms of integrity and honesty. ANC to be honest to God was infiltrated by citizens who were economically deprived due to historical circumstances. I am also economically deprived

Tim Venediger Jul 23, 2024, 08:08 AM

Just one word to describe this- Mafia

Bennie Morani Jul 23, 2024, 09:00 AM

Of course the US Mafia got lots of money from waste (sanitation) contracts.

rahlabi Mehlape Jul 23, 2024, 08:27 AM

Y'all are ignorant ,this has been done that way since our democracy, the state is the feeding trough for the ANC . Now you know why service delivery is not impossible.

Ifitwalkslikeaduck P Jul 23, 2024, 08:32 AM

The way of Africa and particularly the ANC cadres.... break or degrade the working system just enough to make it unpleasant for everyone then jump in to take the bribe or tender to make it work. Water, waste, borders, licenses, documents...the list goes on.

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 08:35 AM

A senior ANC extrudee alleged to be involved in corrupt activities? How can this bbbee?

Podu Kgomo Jul 23, 2024, 12:57 PM

No, BBBEE does not equal corruption. Unless your suggestion is that, no black person is meritoneus enough to run anything.

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 01:46 PM

x

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 01:46 PM

That is most certainly not my suggestion. A good part of my career was spent working on businesses built by smart and successful black business leaders in various parts of Africa. We both know that competence and merit has nothing whatever to do with colour. We also know that BBBEE is used in SA by a group of politically connected skelms to skim vast amounts of money that should be used to provide services to our citizens. In the rare cases that I've come across where the schemes don't benefit already fantastically wealthy members of the nomenklatura, services are actually delivered at reasonable cost and skills and capacity are built I'm fully in support of it.

William Kelly Jul 23, 2024, 08:38 AM

#ratesboycott. The only language politicians understand.

Scott Gordon Jul 23, 2024, 06:56 PM

Agreed , as not all who pay rates get the vote . One needs scale to do this . Here in East London 50-100k to get involved . Have a well thought out mandate . Approach the Muni for our participation as ' consultants ' as to how our money is spent . 3 months of no money will be a wake up call !

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 09:27 AM

If found guilty, he must face treason charges. All of these mafias need to be smashed to pieces - waste, water, construction - you name it.

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 09:34 AM

If found guilty that will be statistically significant outlier. If sentenced that will be a signal to begin watching out for squadrons pigs overhead.

D'Esprit Dan Jul 23, 2024, 10:26 AM

Based on previous experience, you're absolutely correct. I'm just hoping (possibly naively) that the pace of revelations and evidence is mounting quickly and the ANC won't be able to shield all the comrades, all of the time from here on. Once the levee breaks, who knows?

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 11:59 AM

There's nothing at all to suggest that the safrican electorate has a problem with industrial scale corruption. On the contrary, 60 odd percent of the people that voted last time round celebrated and rewarded it. I have no reason to expect that those so endorsed have any reason whatever to begin pulling their fingers out of the dyke.

johnbpatson Jul 23, 2024, 09:27 AM

The mafia became very rich in New York and Queens through bootlegging and waste contracts, and the ANC learnt its lessons from them. In New York though, there was usually a separation between the politicians and the gangsters, in SA they are often the same.

Mukesh Kesa Jul 23, 2024, 10:05 AM

ANC mafia at work; Do not disturb.

Lucifer's Consiglieri Jul 23, 2024, 10:57 AM

Not even original criminality. Municipal waste management was a favoured New York Mafia target. Except in this case the crime bosses actually manage to get themselves embedded in local government by donning ANC colours and getting elected.

Stefan Roets Jul 23, 2024, 11:05 AM

Our Councilor told us the waste contracts have been reviewed because some providers have a 60% non-delivery rate. We often have to resort to emptying and disposing of the public refuse bins at our own cost since the contractors simply do not do it. And the ANC supports this farce?!

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 12:03 PM

Same same in my area. We've also done 100% of the road repairs that have happened in the last 6 years. We are being pumped for all the skelms are worth and at some pont the borehole is going to run dry.

mariajohan19 Jul 23, 2024, 03:26 PM

MMC Jacqui Uys better get a bodyguard urgently. Brave woman indeed. Matjila, super cadre in contrast, is part of the problem, not of the solution.

blaxx47 Jul 23, 2024, 03:33 PM

Not to forget COLLEN Matjila, the Gigagba appointee as CEO of Eskom, who, during his 6-month tenure opened the door to the Guptas and Regiments Capital. And loosened all controls on pricing of Coal delivered to the power stations.

blaxx47 Jul 23, 2024, 03:35 PM

Are these Matjilas blood relatives, maybe brothers, so apparently uncaring about honesty, and forever implicated in huge-scale waste of public monies? How on earth does every racketeer named MATJILA continue to get away with it? Please reveal to us the basis of their cast-iron protection, DM.

Anthony Krijger Jul 23, 2024, 03:48 PM

Chaos as brought to you by the ANC! Helping us descend into the Banana Republic that we've become. Waste management is not longer about keeping cities clean, but about dividing spoils between hyenas.

Middle aged Mike Jul 23, 2024, 04:23 PM

The same hyenas who assassinate 50+ concillors a year in KZN alone as part of a succession management strategy that doesn't appear to be driven by a burning desire to serve the needs of the citizens. One could be forgiven for mistaking the glorious liberation movement for an organised criminal network with a sideline in governing.

louw.nic Jul 24, 2024, 01:50 PM

Many of us are making that mistake...if it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck.

Walter Makgothi Jul 23, 2024, 04:27 PM

Insource the waste removal services, and stop these mafias in their tracks.

Roddwyn Samskonski Jul 23, 2024, 04:41 PM

Ms Uys, please make sure you have really good personal security in place for yourself. These thugs stop at nothing.

Johan Greyling Jul 23, 2024, 05:04 PM

Unbelievable. Surely if any one is serious about corruption this can be stopped in its tracks. Never felt more like using foul language.

riannawentze Jul 23, 2024, 05:11 PM

“Without strong watchdog institutions, impunity becomes the very foundation upon which systems of corruption are built. And if impunity is not demolished, all efforts to bring an end to corruption are in vain. “ — Rigoberta Menchú, Nobel Prize laureate. “Corruption is paid by the poor” — Pope Francis.

Gregory Scott Jul 24, 2024, 09:56 AM

Set the standard that gives the rate payer the best bang for their buck and do not compromise on that standard for anybody. After all, it is rate payers that are the priority, they are the 'goose that lays the golden egg' from which all benefit. Vehemently fight the corrupt with everything available

Indeed Jhb Jul 24, 2024, 10:58 AM

Three new rules? Basic logic but then outcome can be measured and that's the thorn! All the 'extra' money but as it was ecplained by a previous Accountant General - it's the price the State is prepared to pay to uplift the people..... Unfortunately the same people all the bbbeee time!