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ANC-DA tensions rising over fix for Sita mess

Portfolio committee chair Khusela Diko and communications minister Solly Malatsi

Solly Malatsi and Khusela Diko, the chair of parliament’s portfolio committee on communications, are caught up in yet another heated row, this time over the communications minister’s decision to introduce regulations that allow government departments to bypass the State IT Agency when procuring digital services.

Speaking to Radio 702 on Wednesday, Diko alleged that Malatsi is repeating a mistake he has made on previous occasions, where the minister may have a valid point but executes on it in a way that’s beyond his legal ambit as minister.

“It is really unfortunate that [we are] back at this spot for exactly the same reasons – the minister seems determined to be legally delinquent,” Diko said in the interview.

“The minister has merit on some of the issues that he wants to address, and he is well within his right to do so. But the minister has to follow proper process and stick to the letter and spirit of the law.”

Diko said the regulations Malatsi wants to introduce will effectively devolve Sita’s powers as the sole IT procurement service provider to various government departments. She said Malatsi cannot do this because the Sita Act “is very prescriptive that Sita is the sole procurement agency for government on IT services”. The act does not have provisions for the minister to make substantial changes to it, said Diko.

Sita has come under fire from senior leaders in government, including home affairs minister Leon Schreiber and police minister Senzo Mchunu, for how its inefficiencies cause project delays and cost overruns for the departments it ought to be serving. These delays are one of the main reasons why some departments have asked that they be allowed to procure IT themselves.

‘Simple solution’

Diko said there is a “simple solution” to the procurement backlog at Sita, which is to automate the process. She accused Malatsi of “throwing out the baby with the bathwater” and “choosing to cripple the system instead of strengthening it”, urging him to exercise the option of appointing a new board and executive team to drive reforms instead.

“At a time when our country is still recovering from a period in which the capacity of the state was all but hollowed out, that minister Malatsi should be seeking a return to that unfortunate trajectory should alarm us all,” she charged in a Tuesday statement.

“Sita was established with the express intention of achieving efficiencies and cost-effectiveness, so the minister should be occupied with strengthening this critical agency, not crippling it. The service delivery challenges at Sita are not insurmountable. They require effective leadership prepared to put in the work, like many other ministers, to rebuild and strengthen existing state institutions,” she said.

Read: Malatsi orders Sita probe amid governance concerns

The statement, posted on Diko’s X feed, drew heavy criticism on her timeline. One user, @iTouchCandi, confessed to be a member of the ANC himself, but questioned whether Diko would have responded to an ANC minister in the same way if they had introduced the new Sita regulations instead of the DA’s Malatsi.

Another user, @Lizo Nyangiwe, who is employed as an assistant director in the Western Cape government, said: “Sita does not have the capacity to cater for all these departments, as a result, we have been waiting for more than two years for network points procurement.”

State IT Agency SitaSita’s alleged use as a method for corrupt networks within the ANC to siphon state funds also came into focus in the thread.

Meanwhile, Malatsi’s communications team has promised to release their own statement on the matter later on Wednesday. However, Malatsi wrote a short response to Diko’s statement on X, in which he described her perspective as “spin”.

“Nothing could be further from the truth. We’ll lay out the facts today. No spin,” Malatsi posted.

TechCentral has reached out to Malatsi’s spokesman for comment and will update this article if feedback is received.  — (c) 2025 NewsCentral Media

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