Showing posts with label Zizi Kodwa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zizi Kodwa. Show all posts

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Why Zuma's top aide is leaving

It is becoming an old and rather monotonous story. Someone resigns from the presidency. Presidential aide Lakela Kaunda gets blamed. Kaunda denies it. And then life goes on, until the next resignation.

Previously the resignations have been those on Kaunda's level as deputy director general (for instance, chief operations officer Jessie Duarte) or beneath her (presidential spokesperson Vincent Magwenya). The next one that is anticipated is the most senior administrative official in government, the director general in the presidency, Vusi Mavimbela. And the reasons for Mavimbela's imminent departure may be the same as everyone else's but the way they reflect on Zuma makes it more chilling.

Mavimbela, as former spy boss and presidential adviser, is no stranger to government. With his wealth of experience and access to privileged information he was adamant to implement plans to make the presidency run like clockwork as an example of how government can do its job. But insiders say Kaunda would overrule him -- brief ministers and DGs about the president's demands without consulting him or not include him in processes which he should be leading. Eventually senior government officials started to wonder out loud whether he has any real say in the presidency.

When the Mail & Guardian asked Kaunda extensive questions about her leadership in the presidency last week she referred them to Zuma's spokesperson Zizi Kodwa. Kodwa on Thursday did not want to comment on Mavimbela's situation, because a final decision on his future had not yet been made, although those around Mavimbela says he is negotiating a plum diplomatic posting that would suit his status in government. Presidency staffers who are close to Zuma say it is simple: The president could not, after a year, trust his director general as much as he should. And no president would keep someone on whose loyalty he doubts.

Mavimbela's spy background and his former job at Mvelaphanda cast doubt on him. Is he fuelling a campaign for human settlements minister Tokyo Sexwale, rumoured to have presidential aspirations? Will he use priviledged information to undermine Zuma's bid for a second term as president? Does he still carry a torch for his former boss, former president Thabo Mbeki? Zuma couldn't figure it out and therefore decided it was best to let him go.

Another set of presidency officials have a different view: he decided to jump out of frustration. Said one: "If Zuma had a problem with his Mvelaphanda links, why did he hire Mavimbela in the first place for such a strategically important position?" No one seems to know the answer. What everyone does know is that Zuma is not comfortable in a meeting unless Kaunda is there. Some say it is for the president to be secure in the knowledge that someone "has his back", while others believe that she is simply the most effective administrator he has. But Kaunda's relations with colleagues aside, what is of real importance is how Zuma's manages these relations to ensure an effective administration. Although the director general is on his way out, the tensions will not leave with him. Some insiders already talk of a fight brewing in the legal services department because Kaunda instructed junior officials without going through the necessary bureaucratic processes -- which may be cumbersome but are important in the running of the organisation.

And when things come to a head, as they did with Mavimbela, Zuma cannot, as his aides say, "be above it all" and leave these issues to sort themselves out. He needs to take the time to ring fence duties and responsibilities, and hold those people to account. And he must ensure that in all this, loyalty does not trump competence.

Source: Mail & Guardian

Sunday, July 11, 2010

'Lakela Kaunda is an Assertive Black Woman'

For someone with a growing reputation as resident "chief bully" in President Jacob Zuma's office, Lakela Kaunda is remarkably cool about the hullabaloo surrounding her. Broadsides thrown her way publicly include that she is a control freak, a bully, involved in a smear campaign against colleagues, and a selfish gatekeeper to Zuma even denying advisers access to him. But Kaunda, a soft-spoken Durbanite, isn't bothered. She quipped nonchalantly this week, in a brief interview with sister title the Sunday Tribune: "People love wicked women, don't they? A Delilah must be found somewhere."

While Zuma's first year in office played out like a soap opera, behind-the-scenes, Kaunda reportedly had a starring role, eclipsing several high-profile figures. Chief operations officer Jessie Duarte left unceremoniously in April, triggering a mass exodus in which communications chief Vusi Mona, director-general Vusi Mavimbela and senior communications aides Steyn Speed and Vincent Magwenya left.

While Duarte, in her famous e-mail to secretary-general Gwede Mantashe, complained about "a smear campaign, rumour mongering, gossip and vilifications" within the presidency before leaving, she later gave some insight into what Lakela Kaunda stands for. "Kaunda is not a bully. She is an assertive black woman. There are people (in the Presidency) who want to push her around (for their own gain), but she is not one to be pushed."

Affectionately addressed by Zuma as "Ntombinkulu", or Big Girl, Kaunda has an especially good relationship with the President in his 500-member-strong Presidency, having worked with him since the mid-1990s, when Zuma was economic affairs and tourism MEC and would turn to her to do his spin-doctoring. Kaunda, who hails from Hambanathi, in the sugar cane town of Tongaat, has also been a newshound of note. A one-time political correspondent at the Natal Witness, she worked her way up to assistant editor. She was appointed editor of the now-defunct Port Elizabeth newspaper Evening Post in 1999 - the first woman to edit a daily newspaper in the country. She also served as chairwoman of the SA National Editors' Forum.

When Zuma was promoted to deputy president, there she was, at the reins of his PR machinery. When he was fired, she left for the social development ministry, where she became special adviser to Minister Zola Skweyiya. She returned to Zuma's side, managing his office at Luthuli House, and when he was inaugurated as President, she was in the Presidency's communications unit of 40 people. A former colleague described her as highly efficient and a go-getter. She was "always astute and very committed... very focused, very professional in terms of helping us interact with the deputy president. I found her very helpful, that is why it is difficult to comprehend these stories written about her".

Presidency spokesman Zizi Kodwa said Lakela worked as part of a collective. The private office she heads was a small part of the Presidency, with about 40 staff who provide personal support to the President. Kodwa said Zuma was an accessible and a "very humble person who "tries to give his time to as many people as possible, including staff".

Eusebius McKaiser, political analyst at the Centre for Study for Democracy, said the exodus of key staffers was not likely to cripple Zuma's ability to function, but was not something he needed. McKaiser said that in the Presidency a number of positions were created because people had to be given "a slice of the victor pie". The real problem was that "the Zuma camp has to say thank-you to a lot of different constituencies that carried him to victory. Zuma's communications department needed "good communicators and political strategists who understand the power of gatekeeping," he said.

Wisecracks have ventured that it is Kaunda - and not Zuma - who runs the country.

Source: All Africa

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Malema and the spy papers

Julius Malema's "intelligence document" was compiled by a former Sars employee - who is facing criminal charges but insists he was part of a sting operation. In an interview with the media following revelations of his business interests, Malema said he was in possession of a document listing the names of prominent political leaders who backed President Jacob Zuma's rise to power and were targeted for lifestyle audits. "I will make (the document) public, we just took it to the police to verify it," Malema told SAfm. He later told Metro FM last night that he would take the document to Zuma. "We received a document delivered in my office by anonymous fellows ... which has a long list of our names. There were instructions to people in Sars to investigate (me and) ... (deputy police minister) Fikile Mbalula and (Zuma's spokesman), Zizi Kodwa," he said.

Mbalula could not be reached, but Kodwa said even though he had not seen the document, he was aware of it. Although a cabinet minister anonymously told The Star last night that the document was "handled at the highest level", Ministry of State Security spokesman Brian Dube said Minister Siyabonga Cwele "does not know what Malema is talking about". Malema told e.tv that the document was compiled by "very senior people in Sars, very senior management, some of them in cabinet today" - a tacit reference to former Sars commissioner and Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan. Coincidentally, Gordhan called for lifestyle audits in his budget speech last week.

The Star was approached last year by a former Sars employee, Michael Peega, who claimed he was part of a secret intelligence unit in the revenue service established by Gordhan. The Pretoria-based Peega, 34, said Malema was referring to his document. Malema's spokesman, Floyd Shivambu, said they were yet to release the document, but refused to confirm that this was the same Peega report. Peega said part of their brief was to investigate the lifestyles and tax status of senior Zuma supporters. This was during 2007, when the ANC's succession battle reached its apex. Others on Peega's list included national police commissioner Bheki Cele. Cele, through his spokeswoman Nonkululeko Mbatha, said last year that he was aware of the document but had decided to treat it "as rumour". However, Peega was fired by Sars for allegedly getting involved in rhino poaching and is facing criminal charges. He claimed he was part of a sting operation, a claim denied by Sars. The revenue service fired him after he was arrested following an internal disciplinary hearing.

At that time, The Star could not establish the veracity of Peega's claims or Sars's denial. Contacted yesterday, Peega said he stood by the document. "I am not backing off. That's why I want (Sars) to confront me in public to say that this document is not authentic. I am 200 percent behind it," Peega said. Asked about the criminal charges, he said: "The case has not gone to trial, there have been postponements... I maintain what I told you, that (I was part of a sting operation)." Peega said they were given fake IDs to operate and place suspects under surveillance.

Peega, who was initially with the military's special forces, said other recruits in his units included former members of the defunct Scorpions and police. Sars's senior managers at the time dismissed Peega as a disgruntled employee and said the so-called intelligence unit was a legitimate department dealing with organised crime. The taxman showed The Star documents to illustrate that the unit was legitimate, audited and accounted for. Sars said at the time there was a different unit that conducted routine lifestyle audits, and not Peega's department.

Sars spokesman Adrian Lackay told The Star last night: "Sars has a proud record of integrity and applies the law with fairness, with impartiality, and equally to the affairs of all taxpayers."

Source: IoL