Travel expenses and accommodation of the police minister's assistant cost taxpayers nearly R450,000
06 December 2023 - 23:27
by Andisiwe Makinana
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Police minister Bheki Cele Picture: FRENNIE SHIVAMBU/GALLO IMAGES
The DA says it will submit a Promotion of Access to Information Act (Paia) application to get information about a company that paid for police minister Bheki Cele’s trip to the Rugby World Cup in France.
In response to a DA parliamentary question, Cele revealed that while his trip was sponsored by a private company, taxpayers paid for his executive assistant to the tune of R446,339.43.
“Yes, the trip was fully sponsored by a private company for the minister of police except for the S&T and travel insurance,” said Cele in response to the DA’s Greg Krumbock.
The response shows the ministry spent R33,256 on Cele.
It also shows the executive assistant had flights, accommodation and ground transport covered by the police ministry, running up a tab of nearly R450,000.
Cele said the executive assistant accompanied him as an official assistant. His or her meals and access to the stadium were sponsored by the private company.
DA MP Okkie Terblanche said the DA will submit a Paia request to Cele to ascertain the name of the private entity, whether Cele’s assistant flew in business or first class, and if he or she stayed in five-star hotels paid for by taxpayers.
Terblanche also wants the minister to share details on the purpose of the assistant travelling to the World Cup, whether any additional expenses were paid for by the taxpayer for VIP protection, and whether the private company has any dealings with the SAPS or the government.
Terblanche said the DA wants to ensure the gifts were not provided by a company involved in the supply chain of police equipment and/or other tenders, as such a gift would fall foul of the Executive Members’ Ethics Act and its accompanying code of conduct.
“At the same time, it is unfathomable that the minister would allow almost half-a-million rand to be spent on an assistant where SAPS already has budgetary restrictions, shortages of detectives and dilapidated police stations,” he said.
“However, notwithstanding the above, it is clear this trip was not part of ministerial duties, as it was a privately funded trip and as such, any staff member being covered by the taxpayer for a personal trip is in clear violation of the act and code of conduct.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Taxpayers foot R500k bill for 'assistant'
DA to seek details of Cele’s Rugby World Cup trip
Travel expenses and accommodation of the police minister's assistant cost taxpayers nearly R450,000
The DA says it will submit a Promotion of Access to Information Act (Paia) application to get information about a company that paid for police minister Bheki Cele’s trip to the Rugby World Cup in France.
In response to a DA parliamentary question, Cele revealed that while his trip was sponsored by a private company, taxpayers paid for his executive assistant to the tune of R446,339.43.
“Yes, the trip was fully sponsored by a private company for the minister of police except for the S&T and travel insurance,” said Cele in response to the DA’s Greg Krumbock.
The response shows the ministry spent R33,256 on Cele.
It also shows the executive assistant had flights, accommodation and ground transport covered by the police ministry, running up a tab of nearly R450,000.
Cele said the executive assistant accompanied him as an official assistant. His or her meals and access to the stadium were sponsored by the private company.
DA MP Okkie Terblanche said the DA will submit a Paia request to Cele to ascertain the name of the private entity, whether Cele’s assistant flew in business or first class, and if he or she stayed in five-star hotels paid for by taxpayers.
Terblanche also wants the minister to share details on the purpose of the assistant travelling to the World Cup, whether any additional expenses were paid for by the taxpayer for VIP protection, and whether the private company has any dealings with the SAPS or the government.
Terblanche said the DA wants to ensure the gifts were not provided by a company involved in the supply chain of police equipment and/or other tenders, as such a gift would fall foul of the Executive Members’ Ethics Act and its accompanying code of conduct.
“At the same time, it is unfathomable that the minister would allow almost half-a-million rand to be spent on an assistant where SAPS already has budgetary restrictions, shortages of detectives and dilapidated police stations,” he said.
“However, notwithstanding the above, it is clear this trip was not part of ministerial duties, as it was a privately funded trip and as such, any staff member being covered by the taxpayer for a personal trip is in clear violation of the act and code of conduct.”
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