Comrade Zulu goes after corruption whistleblowers in her Department
11 March 2024
Following ethics complaints filed by the DA to the Public Protector, Social Development Minister Lindiwe Zulu and her co-accused acting Director-General, Linton Mchunu, are reportedly seeking to silence whistleblowers. In October last year, the Public Protector began investigations into two matters centred around Minister Zulu. First, the irregular appointment of Mchunu as Director-General, where Zulu is accused of manipulating appointment criteria to advantage Mchunu. Second, alleged violations of government protocols, through an irregular memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed by Minister Zulu and Mchunu with the United States-African Development Foundation (USADF) to support SMMEs, without approvals from National Treasury or the Department of Small Business Development.
As the Public Protector seeks to complete its constitutionally mandated work, Minister Zulu and Mchunu have reportedly begun an “investigation” into officials at the Department of Social Development (DSD), who have sought to expose wrongdoing. Minister Zulu and Mchunu are set to begin their “probe” this month and conclude it in April, with a three-person team. While employees and unions have expressed deep worry, they have fallen to deaf ears, as Minister Zulu and Mchunu seek to weaponise Public Service Regulations to not only silence but punish whistleblowers. Minister Zulu’s continued negligence of her crucial responsibilities at DSD and her focus on political battles is astonishing. While the vulnerable in our communities suffer, Minister Zulu uses her power to benefit and protect her comrades. This is not only a dereliction of duty, but it is downright corruption, and it is heartbreaking to witness.
Importantly, Minister Zulu is venturing into illegality, as interfering with Public Protector probes and silencing whistleblowers are crimes across various statutes. This is not to mention the blatant waste of taxpayer funds, through a politically motivated witch hunt. Meanwhile, the crises in her portfolio are extreme:
81% of South African households currently skip at least one meal daily, while 41% of households cannot feed their families at all.