logo
#

Latest news with #Kotzé

Watch: Stefan Kotzé begins K24 E36 transplant series, building a street-legal track toy
Watch: Stefan Kotzé begins K24 E36 transplant series, building a street-legal track toy

The Citizen

time13-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • The Citizen

Watch: Stefan Kotzé begins K24 E36 transplant series, building a street-legal track toy

An uncommon build in South Africa, Stefan Kotzé has commenced a video series that will see him transplant a K24 motor in a semi-built but rotten E36 chassis, into an accident-free and rust-free model. Partnering up with RAPiD, the video shows both of the cars and the motor, which will find itself in the final E36 project. Speaking of which, Kotzé plans for it to be a street-legal track toy, which can be used on weekends. Unlike most Dolphin body shapes with the M50B25 straight-six engine underneath, run by enthusiasts, this screaming Japanese four-pot will likely leave many bystanders bewildered. Looking for a new or used set of wheels? Find it here with CARmag! Related: Volkswagen Hands Over To SA To Select Locally Produced SUV's Name In South Africa, the term 'Dolphin E36' typically refers to a BMW E36 3 Series (produced between 1990 and 2000) that is painted in a specific grey/silver metallic colour, commonly known as 'Dolphin Grey'. He will be documenting this process through weekly video updates until the build is completed. Here's episode one: Click here and browse thousands of new and used vehicles here with CARmag! The post WATCH: Honda K-Swapped BMW E36 Project Readies For Local Roads appeared first on CAR Magazine. Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel. Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal.

Mangaung Municipality in spending crisis after exceeding budget
Mangaung Municipality in spending crisis after exceeding budget

The Citizen

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Citizen

Mangaung Municipality in spending crisis after exceeding budget

The DA has called for a full forensic investigation into the Mangaung metro. Mayor of Mangaung Metro Municipality Gregory Nthatisi speaks during a media briefing in Bloemfontein on 9 May 2025. Picture: Gallo Images/Mlungisi Louw The fact that the Mangaung Municipality in Bloemfontein managed to spend 111% of its budget in 2023-24, yet only delivered 45% of expected services, shows that the municipal sector in South Africa is in crisis, says the SA Municipal Workers Union (Samwu). Samwu Free State provincial secretary Thabang Tseuoa said the crisis was brought about by 'systemic governance failures, entrenched financial mismanagement, widespread corruption'. He said underperforming and corrupt officials were 'often protected due to party loyalty rather than competence or ethical conduct'. Auditor-general report on Mangaung Municipality Auditor-general (AG) Tsakane Maluleke told the select committee on public accounts this month that the metro had overshot its budget by spending 111% for the 2023-24 financial year. In cases where payment obligations were to be fulfilled, payments and extensions made were not in line with the contract and contractual obligations were not settled within 30 days as required by Treasury rules. ALSO READ: Eskom to disconnect 15 Free State towns over billions worth of debt The AG found that the root cause of the problem was the metro's weak financial governance, lacking oversight mechanisms and insufficient knowledge, skills, or awareness among staff regarding proper internal control procedures. The union blamed the provincial cooperative governance and traditional affairs department and provincial Treasury for implementing ineffective interventions that worsened the rot. DA expresses concern over city manager The sentiments were echoed by DA ward 24 councillor and party caucus chair Dirk Kotzé, who said Mangaung's financial woes would continue because its senior officials were allegedly implicated in financial mismanagement and not made to account. 'It is deeply problematic that the city manager is expected to initiate investigations through the disciplinary board, while being directly implicated,' Kotzé said. 'There are no countermeasures in place to curb excessive overtime payments, which threaten to leave the budget unfunded. 'Additionally, there are no commitments to improve revenue collection rates, nor has there been any change in the policy to collect outstanding government debt.' READ MORE: Water wasted in Free State totals R3.7 billion in last seven years Kotzé said that consequence management was not prioritised by both the political and administrative leadership in Mangaung. He cited a case of hacking of the municipality's information system in a ransomware attack where the hackers demanded R10 million. 'The incident was investigated by the Hawks and a report was presented to the council implicating certain officials. 'However, to date, there has been no feedback and no action,' Kotzé said. Full probe into Mangaung Municipality He called for the AG to conduct a full forensic investigation into the Mangaung metro and Centlec billing systems, which allegedly had inaccurate readings and estimated billing. 'We believe the integrity of the system's data has been compromised since the 2023 ransomware attack,' Kotzé said. In 2019, Mangaung was placed under national government intervention to rescue it from its dire financial situation. 'Despite the financial recovery plan implementation, only 45% of key service delivery targets were achieved, but 111% of the budget was spent. 'After a year of implementation, it has not yielded improvements in the financial state of the municipality,' the AG report said. NOW READ: Matjhabeng municipality's appeal rejected amid financial challenges, service delivery collapse

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