Mystery of R5.5 million Lottery grant
Money never reached us, says official beneficiary
- The National Lotteries Commission (NLC) gave R5.5 million to a Limpopo organisation which says it never got the money.
- The NLC has confirmed the money was paid into an FNB account in 2019, but the organisation says that account appears to have been opened using fraudulent documents.
- Also curious is that the grant is for work in the Northern Cape, not in Limpopo.
- Makhado police confirmed that a criminal complaint had been laid, but said the case had been closed because of lack of evidence.
A mysterious grant of R5.5 million has been given by the National Lotteries Commission (NLC) to a Limpopo organisation which says it never got the money.
The grant, to Louis Trichardt-based non-profit organisation Uprising Youth Development (UYD) was to fund a project in the Northern Cape, according to a list provided to Parliament by the NLC. There were no details of the type of project.
But Tshilidzi Mutheiwana, speaking on behalf of UYD, said the organisation had never applied for the grant and had not received the money.
Mutheiwana, who described himself as UYD’s “technician”, said they first became aware of the Lottery funding after the Department of Social Development contacted them to ask about the project, and how the funds had been spent.
The NLC had confirmed that the money was paid into an FNB account in March 2019, he said. When UYD started investigating, they immediately realised something was wrong, Mutheiwa said. He claimed that a copy of an ID of one of the board members was fraudulently certified at the Atteridgeville police station in Pretoria, and used to open a bank account at FNB for the NPO.
UYD had reported the case to the police. Makhado police confirmed that a criminal complaint had been laid, but said the case had been closed because of lack of evidence.
NLC spokesperson Ndivhuho Mafela confirmed that “A complaint was lodged with the NLC regarding the Uprising Youth Development NPO”. He said the NLC had instituted an investigation into the matter. “The NLC has since taken a decision to refer the matter to the police.” He did not say who had lodged the complaint.
Uprising Youth Development was registered with the Department of Social Development on 29 May 2015 with the aim of “uplifting the youth by taking them out of the street and keeping them busy or exploring their talents” according to DSD records.
The organisation’s registered address is 30 Joubert Street, Louis Trichardt. But when we visited the address, we found only a dilapidated house from which a cross-border funeral service ferries bodies to Zimbabwe.
The grant awarded to Uprising Youth Development was made under the NLC’s “proactive” funding model. This model was introduced in 2015 and allows the relevant Minister, the NLC’s board or the NLC itself to identify projects and then allocate funding. In effect it means that a worthy project is identified (following proper research) and an “operator” is found to manage the project.
It is unclear how the NLC’s staff members decided that a small Louis Trichardt-based organisation, with no experience in construction or large capital projects, was the right candidate to run a R5.5 million project in the Northern Cape.
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