ENERGY Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson is one of several cabinet ministers who will probably be approaching the new year with some trepidation.
One matter likely to be occupying Joemat-Pettersson’s mind is the widely reported speculation that she’s on the verge of being fired by President Zuma during yet another cabinet re-shuffle. However, some commentators now suggest the president may be temporarily holding off making any further cabinet changes, following the furore that erupted over his unexpected firing of Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene and the surprise promotion and equally rapid demotion of his successor, David van Rooyen.
Another issue for the energy minister will be how to respond credibly to tough questions being asked about her department’s notice in a Government Gazette of December 21 confirming Cabinet’s decision to procure 9,600MW of nuclear energy – particularly given that the notice was signed by then minister Ben Martins on November 11 2013, six months before she was assigned the energy portfolio but only published now. Allegations include that Joemat-Pettersson has been consistently disingenuous, at best, in her public utterances on the nuclear procurement process since taking office.
But a third uncertainty Joemat-Pettersson may be pondering is the outcome of legal action initiated by herself that had initially been set down for hearing last month (November), but that has now been postponed to the new year. This is a review of findings against her by Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, relating to her role in the November 2011 awarding of a new five-year, R800-million tender to manage and operate South Africa’s seven-vessel fisheries research and patrol fleet for the Department of Agriculture, Forestry & Fisheries (DAFF), of which she was then minister. If this judgment goes against her, she may be in line for another, politically embarrassing, formal reprimand by President Zuma.
Joemat-Pettersson has previously fallen foul of the Public Protector. In March 2013, also while she was still DAFF minister, she was reprimanded by the President for violating the Executive Ethics Code, following a recommendation to this effect by Madonsela in her report “Costly Moves” of November 2012. The violation had involved the “reckless” use of public funds during the minister’s lengthy stays at expensive hotels and guest houses during 2010. In March 2013, President Zuma sent a brief notice to Parliament indicating that he had delivered the reprimand, but he did not give any details of when, where or how it had been delivered, or received.
The DAFF fisheries fleet tender had been held for the previous 12 years by maritime services company Smit Amandla Marine, before it was awarded in November 2011 to the Sekunjalo Marine Services Consortium. This consortium consisted of Sekunjalo Marine Services, a division of Sekunjalo Investments Limited (since renamed African Equity Empowerment Investments Limited), that held a 65% interest; KND Naval Design (15%); and Nkiruka Investments (20%). Popularly called the “Sekunjalo contract”, the tender was cancelled just three months later, in February 2012.