Dismissing the role of crime in Eskom’s woes makes it hard to take Kgosientsho Ramokgopa entirely seriously
Electricity minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa makes his way to the stage to address employees on a visit to the Lethabo coal-fired power station in Vereeniging on March 23. MPs have voted against establishing a panel to investigate claims of corruption at Eskom. Picture: BLOOMBERG/LEON SADIKI
But not all of them are honest and hard-working. Some of them are part of the problem. We know this and they know this, so why is it that the minister doesn’t seem to know this? For Ramokgopa to say that apart from a few isolated cases SA’s electricity crisis has nothing to do with corruption seriously calls into question his sincerity.
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