I’m writing this blog post following Friday’s (October 11) decision by ANC provincial chair and premier Oscar Mabuyane to place public works & infrastructure (DPWI) head of department (HoD), Thandolwethu Manda, on leave pending an investigation into “rape and sexual abuse allegations” circulating on social media platforms.
Mabuyane had this to say: “Noting the seriousness of the allegations levelled against HoD Manda and the position he holds in government, I have considered the options available to me in line with the applicable public service prescripts. I am convinced that placing him on leave will best serve the provincial government.”
“Additionally,” the premier continued, “I have appointed prominent persons to constitute an investigating panel that will take a deep dive into these matters focusing primarily on DPWI. The panel includes, Mr. Petros Majola, Ms. Pamela Tshwete and Ms. Yvonne Badi”.
The premier called on all those who have experienced “sexual abuse and/or harassment in the workplace to use the panel that has been appointed”. “I also call on anyone who has experienced this kind of abuse to report the matter to the police for investigation, ensuring perpetrators face justice.”
The rape culture is institutionalised in Bhisho where powerful men – married, widowed and single alike – have carte blanche to women’s bodies, raping them at will to supposedly advance their careers. The sex-for-jobs phenomenon has been going on for decades in the provincial capital where managers have made it the norm to demand sexual favours from their vulnerable subordinates, personal assistants (PAs) and interns to promote them to senior government positions.
These scandals have been reported at length by the media including publications such as the East London-based Daily Dispatch, alas, with no consequences for the perpetrators who continue to roam the corridors of power at Independence Avenue in Bhisho.
In December 2014, the Eastern Cape DA Women’s Network (Dawn) called on the department of cooperative governance & traditional affairs (Cogta) to act against officials implicated in the sex-for-jobs saga and demanded that sex offenders be named and shamed.
However, a subsequent whitewash report by Cogta cleared senior managers’ alleged involvement in the scandal, effectively spurring the vicious cycle to continue, with many wannabe sex offenders watching closely and thinking they could, perhaps, also get away with it.
The Daily Dispatch reported a decade ago about how two men had their marriages falling apart after discovering their wives had been sexually involved with their superiors with promises of promotions.
The newspaper reported about how one of the men, a police officer, was raising a child that was not his, saying he had decided to have a vasectomy and that two years after the procedure, his wife told him she was pregnant.
“I did not understand it and it is then that she confessed to what I had been suspecting for years,” the police officer was quoted as saying.
“She told me she had sex with the man for a better job because she needed the money. At that time she wanted to change her car and I couldn’t afford one.” Needless to say, their union ended in a divorce.
The married official was shocked to the core and declined her advances, protesting that he was a happily married man, but the PA retorted that his predecessor too was a married man. There you have it, sex-for-jobs arrangements have been perfectly institutionalised in the largely rural and impoverished province, where a government job is a guaranteed ticket out of poverty.
There is also a need for more training and awareness initiatives targeting vulnerable women and job seekers, and other support systems for victims, including psychosocial support and legal assistance to take the sex pests on through the rigours of the justice system.
With Mabuyane having set up a panel – comprising Majola, Tshwete and Badi – to investigate the very serious allegations against Manda, the ball is now firmly in their court. They dare not disappoint.
Majola is a respected community activist in the Eastern Cape, who is widely quoted on issues of social justice, while Tshwete is a former deputy minister and ANC politician, and Badi is former Hawks provincial head.
The trio must prioritise genuine justice for the victims of the enduring sex-for-jobs scandal in Bhisho, ensuring that its findings are thorough, unequivocal, transparent and a deterrent, rather than succumbing to a whitewash that would only perpetuate the systemic injustices faced by vulnerable women.
This story was originally published on Luyolo Mkentane’s Blog