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Millions of South Africans face benefits cut-off in service-provider row

3 Min Read

Millions of South Africans, especially vulnerable people, the disabled and the old, are in danger of missing their social security payments.

This is due to a service-provider dispute, setting the government racing to meet an April 1 deadline.

Zodwa Mvulane, the Project Manager at South Africa’s Social Security Agency (SASSA) said on Tuesday that the agency was working to ensure that as many as 17 million people continued to receive their money, despite concerns that retaining the existing service provider was unlawful and costly.

She said “we will be negotiating with the current service provider for a new contract.”

 

 

The existing contract, run by Cash Paymaster Services, a unit of Technology Company Net1 unit, had been in doubt since South Africa’s highest court ruled four years ago that the tender process to acquire its services was unlawful.

It ordered that a new contract should be negotiated.

However, SASSA had so far failed to find a new service provider to take up the service at the start of April or set up its own payment agency, officials said, adding that they opted to renew the deal with Cash Paymaster Services despite the court order.

The looming crisis saw opposition parties and ruling African National Congress members of parliament unite in a rare display of cross-party condemnation as SASSA officials struggled to justify the delays.

 

 

For millions of South Africa’s most vulnerable, SASSA money was often the difference between an empty or full belly.

The Treasury expressed misgivings about SASSA retaining Cash Paymaster Services, a move also criticised by members of parliament’s committee on public accounts.

“You are literally between a rock and a hard place because Treasury will have to approve your process and it doesn’t look like it wants to do it,’’ said Tim Brauteseth of the opposition Democratic Alliance.

Brauteseth quoted a Treasury letter to SASSA as saying that extending a contract declared invalid by the Constitutional Court was “not justifiable’’.

The government’s expenditure on social grants in the 2017/2018 financial year was over 12 billion dollars, a key expenditure item in a low-growth environment.

Meanwhile, the country’s Social Development Minister, Bathabile Dlamini, had assured beneficiaries that government would continue with payments.

The minister said she would hold a news conference on Wednesday to address all questions related to SASSA. (Reuters/NAN)
AIJ/HA

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