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The DCEO needs prayers

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THERE is a wave of indolence gripping our journalists. On bad weeks they call the DCEO spokesperson, ‘Matlhokomelo Senoko, who dully mumbles some confirmation of someone being “investigated”.

The journalists will then punish the keyboards with glee, announcing their scoop to a country that frowns at the mention of the DCEO investigating someone.
Somewhere in the third or fourth paragraph, depending on which newspaper you are reading, there will be a line from Senoko saying she cannot reveal further details for fear of jeopardizing the ‘investigation’.

Seasoned editors know the drill: It’s the same old thump-sucked tripe seasoned with things that look news.
Senoko never disappoints because she always has something cooking in her pot. The only problem is that the DCEO’s pot never boils.
And even if it boils, as it happens once in a blue moon, it will spew some inedible food that instigates a running tummy. Luckily the lethargic reporters quickly move on to other ‘hot investigation’, to leave the DCEO’s pot bubbling on the stove.

The DCEO has since perfected this graffiti art of deliberately confusing activity for progress. It has to keep pretending that it’s working to justify its budget allocation from the government.
When they feel that their scam is about to be exposed, their director will whimper about the lack of money to investigate cases. But don’t think he is being sincere about it because he too knows that he runs a sham of an organisation that masquerades as a cheeky bulldog.

Although we have always known that the DCEO is a pathetic excuse of an organisation we have to admit that they have pushed the frontiers of mediocrity in recent weeks. And brazenly so. With the zest as well.

We have to hand it to them because they have done so in such spectacular fashion that puts even the most inept people to sham.
Here is what transpired in the build-up to what has become the ultimate show of the monkey shines we have witnessed in the past few days.
A British media outlet sniffed what it thought was a corrupt relationship between self-proclaimed businessman Aaron Banks and our own brother ‘Maseribane.
They happened upon a story that Banks had bankrolled the BNP’s campaign in exchange for a diamond prospecting licence.

It wasn’t an entirely new story because the Public Eye had already revealed months ago that the party had been funded by the business mogul.
The newspaper, which badly needs a redesign before it injures our eyesight, revealed that the money from Banks had flowed to the party through Bro Maseribane’s personal account.
The British media were interested in Banks for their own reasons. The first is that they didn’t like the fact that he had funded the Brexit campaign.
The second is that they thought he had links with the Russians who they suspected to have been the source of the money that Banks used to fund the Brexit campaign.
So the stories are building towards establishing if the Russians could have influenced the Brexit votes through Banks.

Lesotho comes into the picture because the British media suspect that Banks could have used his dubious mine operations in Lesotho to clean the Russian money before funnelling it to the United Kingdom.
Lesotho, therefore, is suspected to have been a conduit in a money laundering scheme.
Bro Maseribane did not just deny the allegations of corruption but invited the DCEO to investigate him.

It took the DCEO just a few weeks to decide that there was no crime. It quickly handed Bro Maseribane a letter explaining that he had no case to answer.
Now, we have heard the DCEO previously screaming about the lack of resources to investigate cases. We also know that they have been pleading poverty whenever they are asked to expedite cases.
Yet in Bro Maseribane’s case money, time and resources were suddenly found to probe the allegations at the speed of light. Notice too that the ‘investigation’ was done at Bro Maseribane’s behest.
The DCEO considered that case so important that it warranted jumping a long queue of other pending cases.
How could the director and investigators not scurry when a minister submits such a request?
A boss had requested to be investigated and he was going to be investigated.

But we all know what it means when a boss asks you to investigate him. The rules of the game don’t have to be spelt out to you.
The DCEO did not even to look for a wink from Bro Maseribane to understand what he meant. And they duly obliged a few weeks later with a sweet love letter.
The joke is not Bro Maseribane because he did what he had to do. He got himself a clean bill of health that he will be rubbing in the faces of his enemies. He is going to be crowing at rallies about that letter. Henceforth, he is untouchable.

Meanwhile, the DCEO has just confirmed that it’s a scarecrow. It’s a nobbled institution that sees no shame on insisting that it’s effective and independent.

The issue here is not whether Bro Maseribane has a case to answer. Rather, it is the speed at which the DCEO rushed to declare him squeaky clean despite its claim that it had no money or investigators to handle cases.

Many will recall that the DCEO once said each investigator was handling more than 30 cases at any given time. Yet for some reason the DCEO managed to find an investigator who could concentrate on this case for weeks.
Phew! The DCEO needs Jesus, pronto. There is a demon of incompetence that needs to be exorcised.

A round of applause for Mokola for being a shrewd operator is in order. Last week, he declared that he had forgiven the rascals who torched the party’s property during a demonstration.
And just in case someone was going to push for criminal charges against the criminals, Mokola said he was also pleading with the police to have mercy on them.
So there you have it: the criminals are off the hook. Just like that. We now know you can get away with arson as long as your leader forgives you and intercedes on your behalf to the police.
You don’t need to be a legal fundi to see that something stinks about the case. It is a notorious fact that the rascals burnt party property. The pictures are all over social media and the culprits are known by name, village and totem.

We also know that arson does not need to be reported for it to be investigated. What matters to the police is whether it happened and who did it.
But don’t expect the police to be rounding up the criminals for they know that we are not equal at law. That is how we roll in this country.

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More pain for customers

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Customers should brace themselves for more pain next week. Lesotho Flour Mills has announced a 15 percent price hike on all maize products with effect from Monday.

The hike comes less than a month after the country’s biggest milling company announced a seven percent price increase on mealie-meal and Samp, which are all basic commodities.

Chief executive Fourie Du Plessis told customers in his latest statement that the adjustment is due to a further surge in the price of raw white maize.

Du Plessis said there had been a 39 percent increase in the price of raw white maize between January 31 and March 31.

He said the spike is “attributed to the adverse effects of the drought caused by low rainfall and hotter than usual weather during the past season”.

Du Plessis said when they announced the seven percent increase in April they were “hopeful” that “raw white maize prices would stabilise during April following rainfall late in the season”.

“Unfortunately, the rainfall was too late to impact the crop yields and prices surged further up to levels of M5.500 per metric ton during the past week,” Du Plessis said.

In his March statement, Du Plessis warned customers to expect “further price increases in early May, with wholesale prices projected to reach up to M8, 800 per metric ton.”

The increase in the price of raw white maize is likely to have a knock-on effect on many other products in its value chain.

Because Maize is the anchor raw for animal feed, there is likely to be an increase in the prices of all protein.

The drought, which has devastated crops in the entire Southern Africa, has also triggered steep increases in the prices of other basic commodities.

The increases are a continuation of a trend that started during the Covid-19 pandemic when bottlenecks in the global value chain stifled production.

The Russia-Ukraine war made the situation worse. So has the power crisis that has hit productivity in South Africa.

The trouble has been unrelenting for customers, most of whom have squirmed as their meagre earnings have been eroded by inflation and continue to lag behind the galloping prices of basic commodities. Just this week the Petroleum Fund announced an increase in fuel prices.

A few weeks ago it was the Lesotho Electricity Company announcing a 9.6 percent increase in power tariffs. Other producers of basic products have quietly reviewed their prices to keep up with the increase in production costs.

Alarmed, the opposition has called on the government to subsidise basic commodities.

The government is yet to respond but pressure is mounting on it to intervene.

Nkheli Liphoto

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Rape suspect told to stay put

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An Ethiopian man who paid M40 000 to a woman who had accused him of rape has been blocked from leaving Lesotho on Sunday.

The police intercepted Langano Meleselambedo just as he was about to board the plane at Moshoeshoe I International Airport.

Meleselambedo’s troubles started two weeks ago when a woman who works as a cleaner at a camp in Polihali accused him of rape.

Meleselambedo, who is a senior expatriate at a company working on the Polihali project, was arrested but didn’t appear in court.

Instead, he offered to pay his victim M40 000 to drop the case.

Negotiations were before the area chief and Meleselambedo paid his alleged victim M40 000.

Meleselambedo thought the matter had been closed but the police stopped him at the airport.

Police spokesperson Senior Superintendent Kabelo Halahala said they have taken Meleselambedo back to Mokhotlong.

“We want the prosecutor to give this matter a considerate thought,” Senior Superintendent Halahala said.

“This case could land in the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP)’s office if need be.”

He said alleged victims should not receive incentives to drop cases against a suspect.

“The victim has to drop the case unconditionally”.

Advocate Motiea Teele KC said although the rape is a crime against the state it is “possible to settle out of court.”

He however said such arrangements don’t apply to minors and people living with disability because they can not give consent.

Adv Teele KC argued that much as the state has interest in such a matter to protect the victim, rape is a personal matter where the victim can forgive the suspect.

He said some victims can accept out of court settlement to avoid court processes which are generally not victim- friendly.

Majara Molupe

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Ambassador fired

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LESOTHO’S ambassador to Canada, Molise Tšeole, has been fired over a Facebook post criticising the government.

Tšeole was fired on Wednesday, the same day he was found guilty after a virtual disciplinary hearing held last Friday.

Tšeole was informed of his termination by Principal Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Thabang Lekhela. Lekhela said the Tšeole’s termination and recall from the embassy in Canada was with immediate effect.

The letter instructs Tšeole to wrap up his affairs and “report to the Headquarters on or before” May 7.

Tšeole got himself in hot water after he made a Facebook post, on April 13, disparaging the government.

“This is the government of the rich. They see the poor as nothing,” Tšeole’s post reads.

“Now they take all the funds meant to help the people and share them among themselves.”

“There is no buying power, there is no money in circulation.”

The reaction from his bosses in Maseru was as instant as it was thundering.

Six days after that post Tšeole was before a disciplinary panel chaired by the Principal Secretary of the Ministry of Communications, Kanono Ramashamole.

He was accused of “failure to have absolute and undivided loyalty to the constitution and lawfully constituted government”.

Other charges were that he failed “to support and maintain the government of Lesotho according to the constitution and other laws of Lesotho”, “caused damage that brought public service into disrepute” and “wrote and circulated a vexatious statement with malicious intent”.

All charges emanated from Tšeole’s Facebook post.

The disciplinary panel found Tšeole guilty and ruled that he is not fit for office.

“The accused is not fit to continue to represent Lesotho internationally, therefore he must be recalled from the embassy,” Ramashamole said in the judgement.

During the virtual disciplinary hearing, parts of which were heard by thepost , Tšeole is heard questioning the credibility of the panel that tried him.

Tšeole kept having a back-and-forth with Ramashamole throughout the intense hearing
Tšeole told the committee that the proceedings should not be high-jacked, insisting that it should be held in a way that will make him feel satisfied.

“I want to know the reasons you are made the chairman of this committee,” Tšeole asked Ramashamole.

Ramashamole kept telling him that he should allow him as the chairman to speak but Tšeole kept talking.

“Do not interrupt me so that I read the charges for you. Let me work using the proper procedure,” Ramashamole said. But Tšeole kept interjecting.

Tšeole later kept quiet and Ramashamole read the charges.

He however argued that the case should be before the courts rather than the disciplinary committee.

Before Ramashamole could respond, Tšeole said he first had to be sure if the committee would bring justice to him.

“I want to be sure that your court is fairly constituted before anything else.”

Ramashamole tried to respond saying they were following the law but Tšeole said that was not true.

Tšeole said he wanted to be represented by a lawyer.

Ramashamole told him that if he did not allow the hearing to continue he would be denying himself a chance to defend himself.

Tšeole insisted that he wanted a legal representative.

Ramashamole told Tšeole that he would continue with the case despite his objections.

Tšeole’s lawyers, Astute Chambers, demanded that another hearing should be held within 48 hours from yesterday or else they would have “no other option but to approach the courts of law”.

Tšeole has written a separate letter appealing against the judgement, saying Ramashamole ignored him when he made it clear that he was not guilty.

“I was present at the hearing, I was willing to have a fair hearing,” he said.

“Your panel cannot make the decision as if I was absent.”

Nkheli Liphoto

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