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Social development minister procures R1.3m BMW

The minister says replacing her and her deputy’s cars — at a total cost of R2.4m — is ‘unavoidable’ as their old ones have done more than 120,000km

A BMW logo on a car. Picture: REUTERS/DENIS BALIBOUSE
A BMW logo on a car. Picture: REUTERS/DENIS BALIBOUSE

Embattled Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini has procured a R1.3m German sedan for her official use in Pretoria, while her deputy has gone for a R1.1m SUV.

The R2.4m splurge on the luxury vehicles for Dlamini and her deputy‚ Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulu‚ is at odds with the National Treasury’s austerity measures introduced by axed finance minister Pravin Gordhan to curb wasteful and unnecessary spending of public funds in an environment where government revenue streams are dwindling.

The Treasury capped the procurement price for official vehicles at R650‚000 in 2014 but that was later revised to R750‚000. In a written reply to a question by DA MP Bridget Masango‚ the controversial social development minister confirmed that her department bought her a BMW 740i in October 2016.

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Dlamini further stated that three months earlier‚ in July 2016‚ a luxury Jeep Grand Cherokee SUV was procured for Bogopane-Zulu. She told Parliament in the written reply that purchasing the vehicles was "unavoidable" because cars they had purchased in 2009 had aged and had travelled more than 120‚000km.

"The official Pretoria-based vehicles allocated to the minister and the deputy minister in 2009 have far exceeded the prescribed 120‚000km and the five year period," said Dlamini in her written reply. "The minister’s vehicle reached 161‚523km and the deputy minister’s vehicle 143‚652km. As such, the purchase of new official vehicles became unavoidable and needed replacement due to high maintenance costs and security reasons."

The minister said procurement was guided by prescripts and regulations of the National Treasury and stipulations of the ministerial handbook, which says the purchase price of cars for a minister should not exceed 70% of their annual remuneration packages, but these may be amended periodically by recommendations of the independent commission on the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers.

Ministers currently earn an annual salary of R2.3m.

Dlamini said it should also be noted that she had delayed the purchase of another vehicle for her Cape Town office "in compliance" with the Treasury’s cost-cutting measures.

Bathabile Dlamini. Picture: THE TIMES
Bathabile Dlamini. Picture: THE TIMES

"Members at national level may be provided with one vehicle for use in Cape Town and one vehicle for use in Pretoria‚" she said. "One official vehicle in Cape Town has also far exceeded the prescribed 120‚000km [151‚062km for the minister] and the five-year period. In compliance with the National Treasury’s cost-containment measures‚ the department has delayed the purchase of official vehicles for Cape Town."

"Although the money for the purchase of the new official vehicles for the deputy minister and minister was budgeted for in the 2014-15 financial year‚ the official vehicles were only purchased in the 2016-17 financial year."

TMG Digital

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