Monday, 24 November 2025

Joburg Inclusive Economic Growth

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Joburg Inclusive Economic Growth

The City of Johannesburg’s Department of Economic Development has reaffirmed its commitment to driving inclusive economic recovery and strengthening collaboration across traditional leadership, academia, business and government.

Speaking at the Royal Business Breakfast in Soweto over the weekend—an official C20 (civil society wing of the G20) side event—the Department’s Head, Mathopane Masha, highlighted Johannesburg’s role as South Africa’s economic anchor and a vital platform for uniting diverse leadership sectors.

“Today’s gathering represents a powerful collaboration where traditional leadership, government, business and civil society come together to advance inclusive socio-economic development,” he said.

Masha added that Johannesburg’s role in hosting G20 processes presents an opportunity to channel inclusive growth at local and regional levels. “Our metropolitan diversity makes the City an ideal neutral space where urban and royal leadership can collaborate at the intersection of tradition and modernity,” he said.

The Deputy Minister for Small Business Development, Jane Sithole, emphasised the importance of centring rural transformation and traditional structures in national development. “South Africa’s traditional leadership is more than a custodian of culture — it is a strategic partner in unlocking inclusive economic growth,” she said. She noted that development must reach communities where potential remains largely untapped.

Sithole also highlighted government efforts to improve access to development finance for rural small businesses and cooperatives. “These interventions are not merely economic tools — they are instruments of dignity, independence and community resilience.”

Adding the voice of academia, Carol Keshy, Acting Director of the Johannesburg Business School, stressed the pivotal role of education, entrepreneurship and traditional leadership in advancing local economic empowerment. “Every community, from major metros to the most rural village, holds extraordinary potential waiting to be unlocked,” she said.

The Royal Business Breakfast concluded with a shared commitment from government, business, academia and traditional leadership to drive sustainable, inclusive economic growth and ensure that communities — both urban and rural — benefit from emerging opportunities.

 MAKE_KASI_GREAT©®™



Capricorn District Municipality’s R11m failed Water Plant at Letswatla

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Capricorn District Municipality’s R11m failed Water Plant at Letswatla


The Democratic Alliance (DA) in the Capricorn District Municipality (CDM) is outraged by the collapse of yet another water project and will demand that the municipal Council urgently institute a full forensic investigation. The defunct R11 million purification plant at Letswatla has never operated since it was built more than a decade ago.

This investigation must include the immediate disclosure of all consultants, engineers and contractors involved, a detailed explanation for the project’s failure, and clear identification of those who must be held accountable.

A decade after its construction, the plant remains a wasted, non-functional asset due to a fundamentally flawed design, the absence of electrification, and a complete failure of municipal oversight. The purification system cannot produce potable water because it is incompatible with the steel reservoir. The reservoir leaks heavily, proving that neither the design nor the workmanship met even minimum engineering standards.

See video here

Despite the site being declared “completed,” Eskom never electrified the plant, meaning it has never been switched on, tested, or commissioned.

To compensate for the defective design, four Jojo tanks were later installed raising questions about why engineers and the municipality approved a system that could never function. Although all components are allegedly on site, the transformer remains uninstalled, the plant is unelectrified, and there is no evidence that the system works.

The original contractor was later blacklisted, which only deepens concerns about CDM’s procurement integrity, contract management, and quality assurance. The community has received no benefit whatsoever from a project funded with public money.

The consequences for residents are immediate and severe. The community relies on a borehole in a neighbouring village, with water pressure so low that only one street receives water at a time. Households often receive water only once a week. Valves repeatedly block including those supplying the local clinic compromising essential health services. A second borehole has been requested for years, yet CDM continues to ignore the community’s pleas.

These failures constitute clear violations of:

The Municipal Finance Management Act – fruitless and wasteful expenditure and failure to ensure value for money;
The Municipal Systems Act – failure to provide basic services;
Supply Chain Management Regulations – defective procurement and poor contract management;
The Water Services Act – failure to provide clean and safe drinking water;
Engineering Council of South Africa standards – as no competent engineer would have approved such a fundamentally incompatible design.
Where the DA governs, we insist on clean, transparent, and accountable governance that delivers real, measurable improvements to the lives of the communities we serve.

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Declaration of GBVF as a National Disaster

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Declaration of GBVF as a National Disaster


RISE Mzansi fully endorses the declaration of Gender-Based Violence & Femicide (GBVF) as a National Disaster. This significant legislative move must ensure that existing safeguards are enforced and strengthened so that every woman and child, and the LBGTQIA+ community are able to live as humans free from fear. Where acts of violence are perpetuated, there must be confidence that the criminal justice system will act accordingly.

GBVF impedes freedom of movement, the ability to study and to earn an income. It even impacts safety within the home, given South Africa’s unacceptable rates of intimate domestic violence. South Africa is in the midst of an epidemic of violence against women and girls, against children, and against LGBTQIA+ people.

RISE Mzansi believes that this crisis requires a holistic approach, beyond just safety, which the National Disaster Declaration must play a role in; with policies on jobs, substance abuse and people’s socio-economic conditions, but the key contributor to this epidemic is that perpetrators act with no fear of consequences. This must stop.

Part of the National Disaster declaration must be about quarterly reporting:

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) must report quarterly on its case load and prosecution rate in relation to GBVF cases
The South Africa Police Service (SAPS) must report on how many dockets and cases relate to GBVF, particularly rape
Stats SA must better highlight the unemployment rate of women.

The Commission for Gender Equality (CGE) must be resourced in order to fully advance it mandate of inter alia promoting respect for gender equality and the protection, development and attainment of gender equality by monitoring, investigating, researching, educating, lobbying, advising and reporting on issues concerning gender equality
Parliament must receive a report from the Executive and its agencies on the impact of the National Disaster

Much credit must be given to the women of South Africa, Women for Change and other civil society organisations who have gotten us to this point.

A year from now, we must have made progress, if not the declaration of the National Disaster would have been in name alone. Now more than ever, political will is necessary.

MAKE_KASI_GREAT©®™



Sunday, 23 November 2025

ANCYL RESOLVING INTERNAL CHALLENGES

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ANCYL RESOLVING INTERNAL CHALLENGES 



The African National Congress (ANC) appreciates and welcomes the successful engagement held between the Secretary General, Cde Fikile Mbalula, and the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL). 

The meeting provided an opportunity for the ANCYL to outline the challenges it had recently confronted and the steps it undertook to address them. The meeting resolved that all suspension letters issued in relation to the matter be immediately withdrawn. It is agreed that the Secretary General of the ANCYL will issue a public apology as part of restoring unity and organisational discipline.  

The ANC commends the ANCYL for demonstrating organisational discipline, maturity and unity of purpose by resolving these matters internally and responsibly. Their conduct reflects a renewed culture of accountability and collective leadership that strengthens both the ANCYL and the broader movement. The ANC expresses full confidence in the ANCYL leadership as they continue to play a decisive role in championing youth development, advancing the struggles of young people, and contributing to the renewal and reconstruction of the movement. 

We call on all members and leaders of the ANCYL to give maximum attention to ensuring the successful convening of the 27th National Congress, from 14 to 17 December 2025, at the University of Limpopo

We are assured that the ANCYL will continue to mobilise the energy, creativity and activism of young people in the service of social transformation. The organisation reaffirms its commitment to supporting the ANCYL.  

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Adoption of G20 Leaders Declaration

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Adoption of G20 Leaders Declaration

 
The Democratic Alliance congratulates all of the South African government on securing agreement on the Leaders' Declaration today at the G20 Leaders Summit.

This declaration represents a significant and positive outcome. It reinforces core principles essential to global stability, security and development, including respect for international law and human rights, the peaceful resolution of conflicts, and a renewed commitment to multilateral cooperation.

Importantly, through the declaration, G20 members seek to ease the debt burden on developing countries, strengthen climate-resilience, and support a just transition to sustainable energy systems that have positive implications for jobs and growth.

In addition the declaration welcomes the "Ubuntu approaches" on food security and nutrition, developed under South Africa's G20 Presidency, and sustainable, climate resilient agriculture. This will expanded access to safe, healthy and nutritious food for vulnerable South Africans.

These priorities are vital for South Africa as government seeks to implement the urgent reforms required to turbocharge our economy.

It has been an honour to be a part of this meeting and the team that made this summit not only possible but valuable. As such it represents an important step toward improved, inclusive global cooperation and, closer to home, to the inestimable value of the GNU.

As a partner in the GNU, the DA will work to ensure that the G20 commitments translate into tangible progress at home.