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"It's a scandal": Claims Mandela funds were used to print ANC t-shirts

Opposition parties in South Africa are demanding an investigation.

SOUTH AFRICA’S OPPOSITION parties have demanded a probe into how taxpayers’ money released for Nelson Mandela’s memorial services was used, after allegations that some of the funds were misappropriated.

An Eastern Cape provincial paper alleged that a senior official of the ruling ANC party had embezzled part of the money released by Buffalo City Metropolitan municipality.

Citing its own research, the newspaper said 5.9 million rand (€389,000) was paid to a local transport company linked to the ANC official.

The company then transferred some of the money to other firms — some of which had nothing to do with transportation, even though the money was meant to be spent on driving mourners to the anti-apartheid icon’s memorial services.

Instead, the newspaper claimed that the money went into the printing of ANC T-shirts.

“We want a forensic investigation into this. It’s a scandal,” Jerome Mdyolo, a municipal councillor for the opposition Pan Africanist Congress (PAC), told AFP.

A councillor with the opposition Democratic Alliance said even the address that appeared on the transport company’s invoice was apparently false.

“Now imagine you get a slip for 5.9 million rand and the address on the invoice is incorrect and fraudulent. It raises your eyebrows,” councillor Terence Fritz said

“So we are asking for an investigation into that,” he said.

A formal request for a probe will be tabled during a routine council meeting yesterday.

Neither the African National Congress (ANC) nor municipal officials could be reached for comment today.

imageSouth African President Jacob Zuma and Archbishop Desmond Tutu during the memorial service [Matt Dunham/AP/Press Association Images]

Fritz said his party was not against the release of the funds “because we couldn’t put any monetary value to (Mandela’s) legacy and what he did and what he meant for us” but it will not tolerate the abuse of public funds.

South Africa is due to hold general elections this year and the ruling African National Congress is facing a tough polls with voters increasingly disillusioned by allegations of corruption plaguing the party.

President Jacob Zuma this month kicked off his party’s election campaign with a slew of promises to crack down on poverty.

But his unpopularity was on show during Mandela’s memorial service in December, when angry South Africans booed him at the event which was broadcast live throughout the world.

- © AFP, 2014

Read: Deaf interpreter at Mandela’s memorial was a fake

More: South Africans honour “giant of history”, Madiba

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