logo
Court orders dissolution of Ngwathe Municipality amid service delivery collapse

Court orders dissolution of Ngwathe Municipality amid service delivery collapse

News2421-06-2025

The Free State High Court has ordered the dissolution of the Ngwathe Local Municipality, citing gross failures in fulfilling its constitutional, legislative and regulatory responsibilities toward residents in towns such as Parys, Heilbron, Koppies and Vredefort, among others.
The ruling follows a case brought by AfriForum, supported by the Save Ngwathe community group.
The parties successfully acquired an interdict compelling the Free State provincial government to immediately intervene in the municipality's affairs.
Ngwathe becomes the second municipality in the Free State to be placed under administration.
Last month, Matjhabeng Local Municipality was placed under administration following the province's MEC for Cooperative Governance, Traditional Affairs and Human Settlements, Saki Mokoena, finally invoking Section 139 of the Constitution, which outlines the process for provincial intervention in municipalities unable to fulfill its executive obligations.
READ | Matjhabeng Municipality finally under administration as province moves to address governance collapse
Mokoena's actions followed a Bloemfontein High Court judgment, handed down on 23 October 2024, which found financial mismanagement, collapsing infrastructure and poor service delivery.
Ngwathe residents allegedly suffered for years
According to court papers which AfriForum submitted, pertaining to Ngwathe, the lobby group said residents had suffered for years under dire conditions - including persistent water shortages, raw sewage flowing in the streets, crumbling infrastructure and widespread financial mismanagement.
The municipality owes more than R1 billion to Eskom and Rand Water.
In delivering judgment on Friday, Judge Johannes Daffue described the municipality and its council as 'dysfunctional' and criticised the provincial government for its inaction.
He said the case warranted judicial oversight, calling it a 'suitable case where the court should play the role of a watchdog'.
The court order instructed Free State Premier Maqueen Letsoha-Mathae and her executive council to:
Dissolve the municipal council and appoint an administrator;
Develop and implement a recovery plan to restore service delivery and ensure financial stability;
Approve a temporary budget and revenue measures to support the recovery plan; and
Submit written progress reports to the court every three months under oath.
The municipality and eight other respondents, including the premier, were also ordered to pay AfriForum's legal costs.
The judgment comes after a series of public protests in 2024, sparked by water cuts, potholes as well as a catastrophic 11% Blue Drop water quality score.
The crisis worsened when Free State's Provincial Treasury rejected Ngwathe's R2.099 billion draft budget for 2025/26, citing a falsified surplus based on an unrealistic 100% collection rate.
AfriForum's Alta Pretorius called the ruling a 'massive victory' for long-suffering residents.
Pretorius said:
This not only brings justice, but legal grounds for real intervention. The government can no longer look away.
The DA's Carina Serfontein welcomed the judgment, saying it confirmed what residents had known for years.
'We will closely track the premier's progress reports and take further action, if necessary,' she said.
The mayor of Ngwathe, Victoria De-Beer Mthombeni, acknowledged the ruling, stating: 'The executive mayor respects the judgment of the Bloemfontein High Court and is studying the judgment in detail and will communicate in due course on the processes going forward.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says he'd consider bombing Iran again if concerns grow
Trump says he'd consider bombing Iran again if concerns grow

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Trump says he'd consider bombing Iran again if concerns grow

President Trump said Friday he'd consider bombing Iran again if the U.S. gathers intelligence that raises concerns about the country's uranium enrichment capabilities. 'Sure, without question, absolutely,' Trump said, when asked during a press briefing if a second wave of bombings was possible. Trump said later he was 'not really' worried about secret nuclear sites in Iran. 'They're exhausted,' he said of Iran's leaders. 'The last thing they're thinking about is nuclear weapons right now.' The Trump administration has insisted this week that Iran's nuclear program was completely destroyed by U.S. bombings and missile strikes on Saturday. Democrats have been unconvinced by House and Senate intelligence briefings this week. Iran cuts off cooperation with nuclear watchdog There's little dispute that the strikes did major damage to Iran's nuclear facilities, but there are conflicting assessments over just how far the country's broader nuclear program was set back. An initial Pentagon assessment said the attacks set Iran's nuclear program back by months, not years; however, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has pushed back hard on those findings. It's also unclear whether Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium remained in the targeted facilities, with some reports suggesting it was moved elsewhere before the U.S. attacks. Lawmakers have raised concerns that if the strikes did not drastically push back Iran's nuclear timeline, there may be a case for striking again. 'We've got the president saying one thing … and based on the [Pentagon's] DIA [Defense Intelligence Agency] analysis, it's different,' Rep. Bennie Thompson (Miss.), the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, said Wednesday. 'His approach, potentially, could get us in trouble. If we don't up our diplomacy game, then all bets are off,' he added. 'The worst thing we need is a broader conflict.' Trump brokered a ceasefire between Israel and Iran that took effect within days of the U.S. bombing. It got off to a shaky start but has held through the week. Democrats remained skeptical of Trump's claims the U.S. 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear program following briefings with Trump officials Thursday and Friday. Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said there are 'just too many unknowns' to determine whether Iran would 'make a dash for the bomb' in the near future. 'Do they now want to be more like North Korea and be a nuclear state than a nuclear threshold state? We don't know and it will take time before we do know,' he told ABC News. Trump said earlier this week that a nuclear deal with Iran was not 'necessary' after the strikes, but he has not closed the door to diplomacy. The president said U.S. and Iranian officials would meet next week. The White House said Thursday that no meeting has been scheduled. Trump released a statement on Truth Social shortly after the press conference, criticizing Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, for claiming Iran won the war with Israel. Trump said Khamenei should be thankful Israel halted its attacks. 'Iran has to get back into the World Order flow, or things will only get worse for them,' Trump wrote. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

South Africa's DA party withdraws from national dialogue amid coalition dispute
South Africa's DA party withdraws from national dialogue amid coalition dispute

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

South Africa's DA party withdraws from national dialogue amid coalition dispute

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -South Africa's Democratic Alliance party has withdrawn from a national dialogue but stopped short of leaving the coalition government after President Cyril Ramaphosa fired one of its deputy ministers, DA leader John Steenhuisen said on Saturday. The national dialogue is a process launched by Ramaphosa to unite the country after last year's election, which saw his African National Congress lose its parliamentary majority for the first time in three decades, forcing it to team up with the DA to form a government. The two parties are far apart ideologically and have clashed repeatedly over the last year, as the DA has accused the ANC of acting against its interests and without proper consultation. Steenhuisen said the DA federal executive had also considered tabling a motion of no confidence against Ramaphosa, but decided against it. However, he said the party was "in the process of losing confidence in his ability to act as a leader not of the ANC, but of the GNU (Government of National Unity)." Ramaphosa sacked deputy trade minister Andrew Whitfield this week over an unauthorised trip to the United States, and said the DA should nominate a replacement.

South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue
South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue

Bloomberg

time3 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa No. 2 Party Stays in Coalition, to Boycott Dialogue

South Africa's fractious coalition survived after the second-largest party opted to stay in the government following its ultimatum to President Cyril Ramaphosa for firing one of its members as a deputy minister this week, while announcing it won't take part in a national dialogue. Ramaphosa set up the panel that includes business leaders, actors and the captain of its national rugby team to guide a dialogue on the country's future development path. The Democratic Alliance made the decision after accusing the president of double standards because he fired one of its members as a deputy minister for traveling abroad without permission while members of his African National Congress who were implicated in corruption retained their cabinet posts.

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