Nkandlagate: Documents confirm public spending on prestige presidential palace
Documents obtained by the Mail & Guardian newspaper confirm that millions of public money spent by the Department of Public Works on Nkandla relate to presidential luxuries rather than security upgrades as previously claimed by the Minister of Public Works, Thulas Nxesi (see here). These latest revelations add to the growing stockpile of evidence against so called ‘security concerns' used in attempts to supress information regarding the spending scandal.
The relevant documents, entitled "Durban Prestige Project A: Motivations and cost allocations", confirm public spending totalling at least R52 million on items that do not relate to security upgrades, R11.4 million on landscaping alone. Other items outlined in the documents that are indicative of gross excessive expenditure on presidential luxuries include:
- R160,000 spent on special lighting at the estate's "social node";
- R210,000 spent on a timber pergola over parking at the residential arrival;
- R500,000 on a tuck-shop and associated costs included in the same line item;
- R700,000 spent on paving between the residential terrace and other walkways;
- R1.4 million for a new kraal and related vegetation;
- R2 million spent on refuse-removal facilities;
- R2.3 million on parking space;
- R9 million on 6 roads in and around the estate;
- R10 million on costs associated to the construction of a helipad.
What is even more disturbing than the costs outlined in the documents, are the motivations provided for them. Many of the costs are justified in the documents as "enhance(ing) the estate to a Prestige Level". Other motivations for expenditures include "to create an African identity which enhances the experience for visiting Heads of State", "to assist with a sense of arrival" and "bringing the project in line with Prestige Projects".