Muthambi appointment a reward for mediocrity: Sadtu

President Zuma's Cabinet reshuffle moved Faith Muthambi from the communications ministry to become the new Minister of Public Service and Administration. File picture: Bheki Radebe/Independent Media

President Zuma's Cabinet reshuffle moved Faith Muthambi from the communications ministry to become the new Minister of Public Service and Administration. File picture: Bheki Radebe/Independent Media

Published Mar 31, 2017

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Johannesburg – The South African Democratic Teachers Union (Sadtu) on Friday accused President Jacob Zuma of “rewarding mediocrity” after he moved Faith Muthambi from the communications ministry to become the new Minister of Public Service and Administration through a cabinet reshuffle that has drawn wide spread criticism and condemnation.

The Congress of SA Trade Union (Cosatu) affiliate said the move by Zuma was “ill advised and defied logic”.

“As a union that represents over 70 percent of education workers in this country, we have played our part over the last few years to help develop and sustain labour peace in the sector. We are thus shocked that against this background, the president appoints an individual who had spectacularly failed in her previous portfolio into the Public Service and Administration Department,” the union said.

“The decision by the president indicates that we have a government that rewards mediocrity and that there are no consequences for those who fail to deliver. The president through this bizarre decision has failed to show any appreciation and sensitivity for labour peace in the public service.

He has essentially taken one of the worst performing ministers in the current administration and given her the task to be one of the key drivers of the developmental state agenda, a task which she will most likely fail in given her dismal track record.”

Sadtu accused Zuma of abusing his Constitutional prerogative to appoint ministers to further his agenda by promoting “internal factional battles” and not promoting a developmental state.

Zuma executed the long-anticipated Cabinet reshuffle late on Thursday night. He fired Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan and his deputy Mcebisi Jonas and replaced them with Malusi Gigaba and Sfiso Buthelezi respectively.

The rand tanked overnight as speculation over the changes in the country’s national executive raged on.

Zuma announced 10 changes to the Cabinet and 10 more at deputy minister level.

Apart from Gordhan, Tourism Minister Derek Hanekom, who last year mooted a vote of no confidence in Zuma at the ANC national executive committee, was also axed from Cabinet. Hanekom said he only found out he had been sacked from media reports and that no reason had been advanced.

Transport Minister Dipuo Peters, Energy Minister Tina Joemat-Pettersson and Public Service and Administration Minister Ngoako Ramathlodi, were also fired.

Sadtu said it would not be silenced when the public service was “plunged into chaos by the appointment of an incompetent minister”.

“Clearly, the president, whilst exercising his prerogative, should have known that competence has to do with efficiency and effectiveness. The president in exercising his prerogative must always know that it also has to do with decency, respect and integrity.”

“Organisations elect and should be led by collectives and not individuals. Cult of personality destroyed many revolutions in the past. The ‘strong and big man’ mentality should be challenged lest we degenerate and be judged cruelly by history…George Orwell once warned us and said, ‘Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely’,” the union said.

African News Agency

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