Step aside Stella, demands DA

Communication minister Stella Ndabeni- Abrahams being sworn into office. Image: Twitter.com/stellarated

Step aside Stella, demands DA as graft allegations mount against minister

The Democratic Alliance says it has it on good authority that this is a practice Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams regularly engages in – facilitating “meetings” to influence outcomes in the awarding of tenders.

Step aside Stella, demands DA

Communication minister Stella Ndabeni- Abrahams being sworn into office. Image: Twitter.com/stellarated

The Democratic Alliance (DA) says the Minister of Communications, Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams, is not fit for office and must be fired as the party listed a series of corruption allegations against the minister.

“She must step aside to allow investigations against her to be investigated without impediment.”

The latest allegation, the DA claim, is that in July 2020, Ndabeni-Abrahams flouted procurement processes at the South Africa Post Office (SAPO) by introducing a businessman and chairperson of private equity firm, Convergence Partners, Andile Ngcaba, to SAPO’s executives in an alleged bid to partner on a highly lucrative R2.1 billion e-commerce platform.

The Democratic Alliance (DA) says it has it on good authority that this is a practice Ndabeni-Abrahams regularly engages in – facilitating “meetings” to influence outcomes in the awarding of tenders.

This is said to occur not only in her department but many others, the DA added.

“We are aware that the SIU is currently conducting an investigation of corruption related to Covid-19 tenders. We will therefore be writing to the SIU to ascertain whether the allegations against Ndabeni-Abrahams are being investigated, if not, we will formally request that it does so.”

The DA says the string of allegations against Ndabeni-Abrahams almost all relate to alleged improper influence and abuse of power in favour of her husband, Thato Abrahams and goes back nine years.

LISTEN: DA MP Phumzile Van Damme outlining the case against Communications Minister, Stella Ndabeni-Abrahams.

Missing i-Pads

The DA says a draft forensic audit in 2011 by the Universal Service Access Agency of South Africa (USAASA) found that Abrahams, while in its employ, had stolen about 20 iPads and other electronic gadgets from USAASA.

At the time Ndabeni-Abrahams was the Deputy Minister of Department of Telecommunications and Postal Services, the department USAASA reported to.

The forensic report was given to Ndabeni-Abrahams and was ‘concealed’ from public record, the DA said, and no further action was taken against Abrahams.

It added that Ndabeni-Abrahams and Abrahams were in a relationship at the time and married a year later. The DA said it will be submitting a Promotion of Access to Information (PAIA) request to get hold of the report.

South Africa Post Office

The DA said in August 2020, Ndabeni-Abrahams was accused of putting pressure on SAPO and the Postbank to award a Covid-19 relief grant contract to her husband.

Mr Abrahams is alleged to have played a vital behind-the-scenes role between Blue Label Telecoms, the SA Postbank and a former SA Post Office executive to benefit financially from the distribution of the R350 Covid-19 relief grant.

SAPO’s board was against the Post Office’s involvement in the distribution of the grants, saying that the partnership with SASSA exposed it to massive financial losses.

Ndabeni-Abrahams subsequently instructed the Chairperson of the SAPO board Tshikani Colleen Makhubele, to step down, according to the DA.

SITA

Also in August, the DA alleges that in another entity reporting to Ndabeni-Abraham’s department, the State Information Agency (SITA), her husband Thato Abrahams was working closely behind the scenes with SITA to identify companies that have been granted, or are in line to receive IT-related government contracts.

Mr Abrahams is said to have close ties with the SITA’s administrator Luvuyo Keyise, appointed by Ndabeni-Abrahams soon after she dissolved the SITA board, the DA said.

ANC internal processes not enough

South Africa’s biggest opposition party says it is aware that Ndabeni-Abrahams has made herself available to the ANC’s Integrity Commission but that is neither “here nor there.”

“The allegations relates to infringement in her capacity as a Minister, an elected public representative not only as an ANC member.”

The ANC is well within its rights to investigate the Minister’s conduct, but one conducted by a “public law enforcement agency” is required, it said, adding that it is practice that the “individual implicated steps aside or is suspended.”

“This is a precedent set by President Cyril Ramaphosa himself when his Spokesperson Khusela Diko took a leave of absence following a Covid-19 tender scandal.”

The DA said it is their “firm belief that Ndabeni-Abrahams is not fit for the office” she holds and ought to be fired.

“We await the rumoured impending Cabinet reshuffle and trust that she will be shuffled straight out of the door.”