logo
Minister Nkabane fails to submit names of panel that oversaw controversial Seta board appointments

Minister Nkabane fails to submit names of panel that oversaw controversial Seta board appointments

Daily Maverick12-06-2025
Higher Education Minister Dr Nobuhle Nkabane has missed a deadline to reveal the names of an independent panel that endorsed the appointments of politically connected Seta board chairpersons.
Higher Education Minister Nobuhle Nkabane was asked to submit the names of the Sector Education and Training Authority (Seta) Board Chairpersons Selection and Evaluation Panel to the parliamentary committee on higher education on 11 June 2025.
The five-member panel was responsible for the selection process in the appointment of 21 chairpersons for Seta boards in May. The committee requested the names of the panel after it was discovered that ANC politicians had been selected, including Gwede Mantashe's son, Buyambo Mantashe, who has been appointed chairperson of the Manufacturing, Engineering and Related Services Seta.
Also named are former KwaZulu-Natal premier Nomusa Dube-Ncube and ex-ANC KZN provincial deputy chairperson Mike Mabuyakhulu.
In a letter seen by Daily Maverick, written by Nkabane to the chairperson of the parliamentary committee Tebogo Letsie, Nkabane has requested an extension of the deadline to 30 June 2025. According to Nkabane, she was concerned over whether the disclosure of the names and details would violate the panellists' rights to privacy. However, she has now recognised that she is legally permitted to disclose the panellists' details.
'I remain concerned that the disclosure may invite unwarranted or unwanted public vitriol against the panel members, as I have experienced… I have written to each of the members of the selection and evaluation panel and advised them of my intention to comply with the portfolio committee's request,' said Nkabane.
Nkabane's response comes after members of the committee and the public raised concerns over the non-disclosure of the selection panellists' names.
The Seta board appointments caused chaos at the committee meeting on 14 May and on 2 June 2025, even leading to the eviction of the EFF's Sihle Lonzi after he questioned Higher Education Department Director-General Dr Nkosinathi Sishi. Lonzi called the Seta board appointments 'corrupt'.
Nkabane had previously said the reversal was solely due to public reaction and that the appointing process had been flawless.
'We saw what was trending on social media… I took it upon myself as a responsible citizen to say, 'Listen, I could pick [up] that among the issues were the recommended candidates to serve as chairs; they are viewed as more politically associated with some of the politicians within the movement, and I decided I must take the concerns of the public,' said Nkabane.
'Time's up' – deadline extension frustrates MPs
Members of the parliamentary committee voiced their frustrations about the minister's request for a deadline extension. Karabo Khakhau (DA) said this was completely unacceptable.
'Minister Nkabane needs no permission to furnish the committee with those names if they exist. Secondly, the minister has had more than enough time to receive permission from the panel to reveal their names. The minister's time is now up. There is no more room to manoeuvre. The committee has exhausted its generosity. Minister Nkabane cannot run away from being held accountable for her attempted politicisation of the appointment of the Seta board chairpersons. The chickens are coming home to roost,' said Khakhau.
Higher education committee chairperson Tebogo Letsie also expressed disappointment at Nkabane's extension request.
'We … felt we had given her enough time to comply. The committee will meet on Wednesday, 18 June, to pave the way forward on what to do,' said Letsie.
Ramaphosa seeks answers
Last week, President Cyril Ramaphosa requested that Nkabane report to him on the matter.
Nkabane drew public ire after videos of her at the meeting chewing gum and being dismissive of MPs' questioning went viral. After the meeting, the minister took to X to explain herself.
'Claims that I was rude or disrespectful are false and based on misleading clips taken out of context. I did not disrupt the process,' she wrote.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nkabane: Parties rejecting budget of Higher Education Dept punishing SA students
Nkabane: Parties rejecting budget of Higher Education Dept punishing SA students

Eyewitness News

time33 minutes ago

  • Eyewitness News

Nkabane: Parties rejecting budget of Higher Education Dept punishing SA students

CAPE TOWN - Embattled Minister of Higher Education Nobuhle Nkabane said political parties who are rejecting the budget of her department are not punishing her, but rather South African students. She said those calling for her head are misogynistic and against transformation in the post-school sector. ALSO READ: Majority of political parties in NCOP reject higher education dept's budget, call for Nkabane's axing Nkabane was motivating her budget in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) on Tuesday, where the majority of political parties said she was failing at her job and couldn't be trusted to manage billions of rands. She, however, avoided responding to her handling of the appointment of boards for the Sector Education and Training Authorities (SETA), which has landed her in hot water. As the Democratic Alliance (DA) on Tuesday sought to increase the pressure on Nkabane to step down or be fired, it laid a complaint against her with the police for misleading Parliament. Hours later, Nkabane faced the DA's parliamentary caucus, who along with the uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) Party and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), slammed her management of the department and said they didn't support the budget. But Nkabane held her ground. 'They are not rejecting the budget of Nobuhle Nkabane. This is not the budget of Nobuhle Nkabane. This is the budget of the people of South Africa.' In attempts to counter claims that she's failing to root out corruption in the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), Nkabane said she had gone to court to cancel a monthly R2.5 million office lease in Cape Town, and to stop the contracts of payment service providers who don't deliver. 'When you are against transformation, it irritates a lot when you see such a young woman leading such a huge ministry in your presence. "It's misogyny. I understand it, I know where it's coming from, and worse when it's a black woman.' On Thursday, Nkabane can expect more backlash as she moves to the National Assembly to motivate the budget.

Mashatile vows to defeat no-confidence motion against Ramaphosa
Mashatile vows to defeat no-confidence motion against Ramaphosa

IOL News

time43 minutes ago

  • IOL News

Mashatile vows to defeat no-confidence motion against Ramaphosa

Deputy President Paul Mashatile Image: SIGCINIWE Deputy President Paul Mashatile on Tuesday vowed that any motion of no-confidence brought against President Cyril Ramaphosa will be defeated in the National Assembly. Mashatile spoke to journalists in the Free State province, where he was joined by Premier Maqueen Letsoha-Mathae in leading the Clean Cities and Towns integrated service delivery programme in the Matjhabeng Local Municipality near Welkom. 'We will be ready to defeat it,' said Mashatile. This comes as the DA on Tuesday backtracked on its threat to implement a motion of no confidence against Ramaphosa, despite tensions between the two parties. DA Federal Council chairperson Helen Zille on Tuesday confirmed that her party would not be proceeding with the motion "for now", but emphasised that they would not be bullied by the ANC within the Government of National Unity (GNU). Experts have viewed the move by the DA leader as "grandstanding" and "seeking attention" because the party knows that they can't afford to leave the GNU. The DA and the ANC have been at loggerheads since the axing of Trade and Industry deputy minister Andrew Whitfield last week, resulting in the DA announcing that it would be withdrawing from the National Dialogue. The party has since accused Ramaphosa of double standards, saying that he condoned corruption after he became mum following the DA's calls to fire Higher Education Minister Nobuhle Nkabane. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ Ad loading The DA has accused Nkabane of lying to Parliament about the appointment of ANC-linked individuals to Sector Education and Training Authority (SETA) boards. The DA insists it will not support the budget of the Department of Higher Education and Training while it is under the leadership of Nkabane. The blue party said it will vote against the budgets of departments headed by 'corrupt ANC ministers'. Reacting to the DA's assertions, Mashatile said his party, the ANC would vote to pass all budgets in Parliament. 'The GNU (Government of National Unity) is going to continue. "We are going to vote for all budgets. If the DA does not vote for any budget, it is their problem. The budget is not an instrument of a minister. A budget is for the nation. Even if there is a minister of the DA, that is not their budget. That budget is to help the people, so we, as the ANC, will vote for all budgets. 'We want this country to work, we want things to proceed. We will vote for all budgets because our people want us to fix the roads, they want water, they want electricity, they want us to grow the economy, employ people and that is what the budget is all about. So, we are proceeding,' Mashatile charged. The DA has been calling on Ramaphosa to act swiftly and remove Nkabane from office, warning that continued inaction would implicate him in enabling corruption. Cape Argus

SACP sticks to its guns on going it alone in polls
SACP sticks to its guns on going it alone in polls

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • The Citizen

SACP sticks to its guns on going it alone in polls

The SACP says corruption, privatisation, and governance decay forced its move to contest elections independently. Supporters of the South African Communist Party march through Braamfontein against gender-based violence, 21 August 2022. Picture: Michel Bega Amid swelling criticism from the ANC leadership, the South African Communist Party (SACP) will not reverse its decision to participate independently in the forthcoming local government elections, it says. The party, which has been in a long-term alliance with the ANC and Congress of SA Trade Unions, believes contesting for state power is necessary in light of the ANC's continued implementation of the neoliberal agenda. The party described its decision as a 'tactical shift in our electoral strategy', saying it realised that, over time, the gains of millions of people had increasingly been undermined by the neoliberal policies of the ANC. Tactical shift in SACP's electoral strategy The party cited corporate class capture of key state positions or sections by office bearers, public representatives, public sector officials and board members in public entities, among others. It objected to outsourcing or privatisation of public sector functions, abuse of state tenders, corruption, governance decay and failure to serve the people in favour of public interests. ALSO READ: Ramaphosa acted 'justifiably' in removing Whitfield, says SACP 'A direct electoral contest is not a break from our strategic goals but a tactical reconfiguration of our electoral strategy,' the party said. It noted that 'forming part of the alliance was never meant to compromise the SACP's independence and mission of implementing the national democratic revolution and socialism. 'All alliance partners are independent formations – and none is part of the alliance to postpone or compromise its independence and historical mission. Shared strategic objectives 'We have come together as allies to pursue our shared strategic objectives,' the party said. Political analyst George Tsibani said the tone of the SACP statement diverged from its characteristic ideology and tone. ALSO READ: SACP plans solo run in 2026 as ANC faces new threat 'A quintessential Marxist-Leninist organisation, the SACP's foundational principles revolve around class struggle and the pivotal role of the working class in achieving socialism. The text in question lacks this distinct tone,' Tsibani said. He said the party was divorcing itself from its main task in the national democratic revolution. The SACP's primary focus areas encompass gender-based violence, community mobilisation and radical policy changes. In stark contrast, the given text concentrates on regime change, black fashionable political parties and the role of the DA, he added. Voting for the SACP would be tantamount to donating votes to the DA. Vote for regime change 'A vote for the SACP is a vote for regime change,' Tsibani said. The party is coming under attack from the ANC top brass for the decision it formalised at its special national congress last year. ALSO READ: SACP's solo election run won't hurt ANC, analyst says Among critics was ANC national chair Gwede Mantashe, a former SACP national chair. He said by contesting the election separately, the party had deviated from the 'black republic thesis' that stated there would not be socialism in SA while the black majority were still under oppression. 'Black republic thesis' He said it was a common view of all SACP leaders that the party must not neglect the ANC's mass base. If the party moved away from that mass base, it would be giving away its own advantage. 'The SACP must be located in the mass base, the ANC, and influence it while theorising on the revolution framework and while we resolve our differences.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store