DA: Natasha Michael's response to Minister Lynne Brown's open letter on Eskom

11th November 2014

DA: Natasha Michael's response to Minister Lynne Brown's open letter on Eskom

Thank you for your response. Your public commitment to provide the Portfolio Committee with information to help us in our oversight duties is duly noted and welcomed.      

I therefore request that the following information be made available to the Portfolio Committee as a matter of urgency:

In addition, I request that you respond to the other points I raised in recent communication to you:
       

Providing answers to these questions will greatly aid the Portfolio Committee in executing effective oversight over the many challenges facing your department.

The current situation at Eskom and other SOEs is damaging to our economy and to our international reputation and cannot continue along the current trajectory of continual bailouts and failure to deliver.

Power outages are jeopardising countless jobs, and it cannot be tolerated any longer. It is simply scandalous that our country has to face a crisis that could have been avoidable with proper planning and administration by those in power.

You raise a crucial point about investor confidence. I agree with you that the record of the current National Government, when laid out to any independent observer, is horrifying. This would go a long way to explaining why foreign investment into South Africa has dried up.

To explain what I mean, let me recount the story of an unnamed President of an unnamed country.

After having several hundred charges of corruption against him dropped on spurious grounds, this individual got elected as President. Since then, he has enriched himself, his family, his friends and his political connections with state money. They have feasted endlessly on government contracts, using their political connection to this unnamed individual to make billions in profits. This unnamed President then unduly benefited to the tune of hundreds of millions in state resources in upgrades to his own private house, and has done everything possible to avoid repaying this benefit. He has undermined every independent institution, including Parliament, to avoid accountability for the money.

This unnamed President has, too, gone into hiding from the unnamed country’s Parliament, where he refuses to answer difficult questions from his unnamed opposition, just as he has gone into hiding from the Court’s where he is ever closer to finally having his day.

Interestingly, everyone in this unnamed country knows that its unnamed President is guilty. But he only remains in office, because he has been able to buy the loyalty of the state security cluster with patronage. His party is willing to undermine every institution of state meant to enforce accountability and transparency in order to protect this unnamed President. It is a remarkable story.

As you can imagine, the story of this unnamed President has made infinite international headlines, doing incalculable damage to the reputation of the unnamed country.

We must do everything we can to fix the problems at Eskom and other SOEs as soon as possible. I will continue to work within the parameters of my role in the Portfolio Committee to make this happen. I urge you to provide answers to the questions listed above so that we can get on with the work of fixing Eskom and the other SOEs in a transparent manner.

I eagerly await your reply and look forward to continuing this constructive engagement.

Kind regards,
Natasha Michael MP

Issued by the DA