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South African News Updates |
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18 May 2009
Transport Minister S'bu Ndebele on
Tuesday decided to return the top of the range
Mercedes Benz he received as a gift, though President
Jacob Zuma said by law he was entitled to keep it.
"I have decided to voluntarily return the Mercedes
Benz and two head of cattle that I received at a
function in Pietermaritzburg last Saturday," he told a
packed press conference in Cape Town.
He added that he would ask for the Mercedes S500 and
the cattle to be sold and the money to be used to
start a business training programme for emerging
contractors.
Ndebele said Zuma and the African National Congress
leadership had advised him that he may keep the car,
which is worth more than R1 million, provided he
declare it in the annual register of members'
interests at Cabinet and Parliament level.
"The
president advised that I should follow the code of
ethics, which is to declare within 30 days, but I did
speak to him and say my personal feeling is that I
should return it."
He insisted the lavish gift from contractors in
KwaZulu-Natal, where he served as transport MEC and
then as premier until his Cabinet appointment, did not
create a conflict of interest.
"There definitely will not be a conflict of interest
because there is no way that as national minister or
even provincial premier, I will be granting any
contracts to contractors in KwaZulu-Natal."
But the minister said he did not want the media outcry
over the car to distract him as he settled into his
new portfolio, or for the incident to sully his
reputation.
"I've had 15 fairly good years in government and the
only thing I really have is my good name," he said.
Ndebele brushed off suggestions that he should
immediately have rejected the car when he was
presented with it by businessmen who had benefited
from KwaZulu-Natal's Vukuzakhe government programme to
help emerging road contractors.
He said in African culture this would be considered
rude, adding that he had been humbled by recognition
from people in KwaZulu-Natal for helping to stabilise
the region after years of political conflict.
"In the culture of the majority of our people, you
don't do that. You don't throw the thing back in the
face of people as if you are suddenly so important,"
he said.
The Mercedes was reportedly meant as thanks for
Ndebele's role in creating a platform for small
contractors in the province. He was also given fuel
vouchers, a plasma screen television set, and wine
glasses.
Ndebele has confirmed that in the past 10 years,
government had allocated close to R10-billion in
contracts to contractors associated with the programme.
The Democratic Alliance and the Congress of South
African Trade Unions have urged him to return the car
to avoid a perception of conflict of interest.
The gift presented a first ethics test for Zuma's new
Cabinet, and Ndebele said when he reflected on the
matter, the only precedent was two luxury cars -- a
Mercedes and a BMW -- that were given to Nelson
Mandela early in his presidency.
Mandela kept the cars, Ndebele said, but never
suffered accusations of conflict of interest.
Asked whether he had been tempted to keep the vehicle,
Ndebele replied that he had no need for it as the
generous car allowance for Cabinet ministers would
enable him to acquire a vehicle to the same value.
"The DG (director general) tells me that we have a
very good car scheme. I can get a car to the value of
more than R1-million and I think for deputy ministers
it is R850 000," he said. - Sapa
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