News
LNDC rolls up sleeves to create jobs
Published
7 years agoon
By
The Post
MASERU THE Lesotho National Development Corporation (LNDC)’s new chief executive, Mohato Seleke, seems to have started his tenure on a good note. The LNDC is building a M1 billion manufacturing hub in Butha-Buthe. The entire project will have 51 factory shells during the first phase. Sixteen shells will be constructed in the first phase.
Prime Minister Thomas Thabane officiated at the sod turning last week to mark the beginning of a project that will directly give jobs to over 40 000 people. thepost this week spoke to Seleke about the project and its impact to the Butha-Buthe community as well as the whole country.
Below are excerpts from the interview:
How big is the project?
I believe this is the LNDC’s biggest project ever in a single district. At the completion of the project Butha-Buthe will be Lesotho’s economic hub. As for now, we are building phase one of the project which is 16 factory shells with the capacity of 14 250 workers.
The plan is to build 51 factory shells which will give direct jobs to over 40 000 people. As you can see the number of factory workers in Butha-Buthe will be equal to the present number of factory workers countrywide.
This is how big the project is in terms of job creation. We are talking about direct jobs here. As always where there is any economic activity of this kind, there are other jobs that are created both in the informal or formal sector.
Various service providers will want to be close to the firms. There will be more jobs outside the factories. We are expecting at least 32 000 indirect jobs after the completion of this project. This is the biggest roll-out of the industry.
How is the project being funded and with how much?
It is fully funded by the government. This project can be divided into two parts. The first one is the infrastructure development. As you will realise there are currently no basic services in the whole area. The first part includes building roads to the firms, pipe water there as well as providing electricity and telecommunication.
The infrastructure component is for the entire estate of 51 factories, although we are starting with building only 16. The total costs of the project is M1 billion. The second part is the building of factory shells as I have stated. This is not wasted money.
It is a real investment. As of now at least over 300 people are already working in the construction and we are expecting them to increase as the building project gains momentum. The construction of phase one will be completed in 2020 or 2021.
This means over 300 jobs for these construction workers for about three years. There will be other companies that will be contracted from time to time to supply other services and goods, which means jobs and profit to those who are not directly hired in the construction site.
What are the long-term plans for the LNDC to develop industry in ways like this?
The biggest challenge facing our country is unemployment and the status quo will continue if there are no investors. We have to create a favourable environment for investors and among others we have to ensure that there is infrastructure as we are doing in Ha-Belo.
One other thing we are working on is to pioneer new industries in other sectors and seek investors to develop them financially and in other ways. Building factory shells is not enough.
Those shells have to have goods produced in them. So, to answer this challenge we are working on promoting and developing agro-industry. It has to stand as an industry in its own right. This is one sector that has a great chance of creating jobs for thousands of Basotho. I will not go deep on what exactly we are doing in that regard because very soon we will unveil our development plan.
In most cases it seems like these opportunities are skewed towards foreign direct investors. What are you doing to ensure that the locals are capacitated, starting with their involvement in the Ha-Belo industrial site?
Some 15 minutes before you arrived here I had a consultative meeting with over 40 local entrepreneurs in the textile business. We were discussing this very thing you are asking about.
We are coming up with specific intervention in that regard. I will not be specific on what we are doing, you will wait for the unveiling of our strategic plan.
They have already formed an association and you will see how we are going to work with them to ensure that as we grow industry they are not left behind. We want an all- inclusive growth throughout all sectors.
But can you shed more light on how you are preparing the locals to be part of the growth?
Resources are needed and we are happy that the government is behind us in finding the means to help the local entrepreneurs. In our strategic plan which we are going to launch very soon, we will show how people in the textile sector will be helped to have a meaningful share in the industry, how the agro-processing business will be supported to eventually grow into a full industry and the related supply chain.
The overall objective is to help each production sector to grow as a local industry and compete internationally. This country has potential to reach that level. Time has long passed for us to continue relying on textiles. The LNDC is currently gearing up for industrialisation of agriculture.
Agriculture is considered risky and banks don’t want to finance it. How are you planning to pass that?
First, we want to build an active economy with all essential support services. For example, we are eyeing a national risk insurance which will be diligently managed so that our livestock and crops will be insured against unforeseen situations that can hamper the progress of business.
We want to grow together with our farmers because we have seen that there is potential in this sector. There are other ways of diversifying our products and therefore respond to our economic challenges as a country.
I guess you have read in thepost every week about the various innovation efforts by the National University of Lesotho students and lecturers. Has the LNDC formed any opinion about them?
You must have heard something about our relationship with the NUL before you came here. A few days ago we signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the university and we have already offered M250 000 towards their research projects from our Innovation Fund.
That was the start of our relationship. We are looking at innovative business models needing to be scaled up. There is a lot we have learned from the university and we want to wholeheartedly support those initiatives by the students.
Staff Reporter
You may like
MASERU
KNORX Molelle’s appointment as the Director General of the Directorate on Corruption and Economic Offences (DCEO) in February 2023 could have been illegal.
The Law Society of Lesotho has told Prime Minister Sam Matekane that Molelle was appointed without being admitted as a legal practitioner in Lesotho, as required by law.
The society claims the information came from a whistleblower on January 2 and was corroborated by its roll of legal practitioners in Lesotho.
The society says the appointment violates section 4 of the Prevention of Corruption and Economic Offences Act 1999 which states that a person shall not be appointed as the DCEO director general unless they have been admitted as a legal practitioner in terms of the Legal Practitioners Act.
In the letter, Advocate Ithabeleng Phamotse, the society’s secretary, tells Matekane that this requirement “is not a mere procedural formality but a substantive qualification essential to the lawful appointment of the Director General”.
“The absence of such qualification fatally impairs the appointment ab initio, rendering it null and void from the outset,” Advocate Phamotse says in the letter written on Tuesday.
The society argues that if left unaddressed the illegality undermines the credibility, effectiveness and legality of the DCEO’s operations and exposes the kingdom to serious risks, including challenges to the lawfulness of decisions and actions made by Molelle.
“Should it be confirmed that the appointment was made in contravention of the mandatory legal requirements,” Advocate Phamotse said, “we respectfully urge you to take immediate corrective action to rectify this glaring irregularity”.
Advocate Phamotse tells the prime minister that if the appointment is not corrected, the society would be “left with no alternative but to institute legal proceedings to protect the interests of justice and uphold the rule of law in Lesotho”.
“We trust that you will accord this matter your highest priority and act decisively to avert further damage to the integrity of our governance structures.”
The Prime Minister’s spokesman, Thapelo Mabote, said they received the letter but Matekane had not yet read it yesterday.
Matekane is on leave and is expected back in the office on January 14.
Questions over the validity of his appointment come as Molelle is being haunted by the damaging audio clips that were leaked last week.
The clips were clandestinely recorded by Basotho National Party leader, Machesetsa Mofomobe.
In some of the clips, Molelle appears to be describing Matekane and his deputy Justice Nthomeng Majara as idiots. He also appears to be calling Law Minister Richard Ramoeletsi a devil.
In other clips, he seems to be discussing cases. thepost has not independently verified the authenticity of the audio clips.
Staff Reporter
MASERU
THE government has increased the salaries for traditional leaders by a massive 88.5 percent.
This means that a village chief not appointed by a gazette will now earn M3 001 a month, up from the previous salary of M1 592. That means village chiefs will now earn an extra M1 409 per month.
A village chief, or headman, appointed by a gazette has moved from M1 966 to M3 567 per month.
Above a village chief is one with jurisdiction over a small cluster of villages, a category three chief, who now moves from M3 768 to M5 181 per month.
A category four chief, known as ward chief, has moved from M4 455 per month to M7 993.
The category five chief, who reports directly to a principal chief, will now earn M10 674, up from M9 939 per month.
There is no increment for principal chiefs.
The government says the budget for chiefs’ salaries has moved from M129.4 million to M208.3 million annually.
The hike follows a series of discussions between the Lesotho Workers Association, representing the chiefs, and the Ministry of Local Government and Chieftainship.
The revised salaries will be implemented with effect from April 1, 2025.
According to the settlement agreement, a discussion about raising the lowest salary of M6 000 for the lowest-ranking chiefs will be revisited in October 2025.
Chiefs who spoke to thepost have expressed satisfaction with the hike, saying it will significantly improve their lives.
Chief Mopeli Matsoso of Ha-Tikoe in Maseru said his previous salary of M1 500 per month would now be doubled, which would improve his life and help provide smoother services to the community.
He stressed that they used to close the offices while going out looking for jobs to compensate for their little salaries.
“Now the people will get smoother services,” Chief Matsoso said.
“The offices will forever be open,” he said.
Chief Matsoso said the salary hike will also serve as a motivation for other chiefs.
Chief Tumo Majara of Liboping, Mokhethoaneng, also expressed his gratitude.
Chief Majara acknowledge the positive impact the salary review would have, especially as a new officeholder.
“I guess we are all happy, that review will help a lot,” he said.
The Principal Chief of Thaba-Bosiu, Khoabane Theko, said the salary increase of chief is a welcome move by the government.
“I’m yet to study how the new salary structure looks like. But I welcome it as a good move by the government,”Chief Theko said.
Nkheli Liphoto
MASERU
Motlatsi Maqelepo, the embattled Basotho Action Party (BAP) deputy leader and Tello Kibane, who was the party chairman, have rejected their suspension from the party arguing it was legally flawed.
The BAP’s central executive committee on Tuesday suspended Maqelepo for seven years and Kibane for five years. The suspensions became effective on the same day.
The party’s disciplinary committee which met last Wednesday had recommended an expulsion for the two but that decision was rejected with the committee pushing for a lengthy suspension.
Maqelepo’s suspension will end on January 7, 2032 while Kibane’s will run until January 7, 2030.
Their suspension letters from the BAP deputy secretary general Victoria Qheku, say they should not participate in any of the party’s activities.
“In effect, you are relieved of your responsibility as a CEC member and BAP deputy leader,” Maqelepo was told in the letter.
“You were found guilty by default on all charges and the committee recommended your immediate dismissal from the party,” the letter reads.
On Kibane, the verdict states that the committee decided to mitigate the recommended sanction by reducing his suspension to five years.
“In the gravity of the charges, the suspension affects your membership in the BAP parliamentary caucus from which you are removed as a chairman.”
They were suspended in absentia after they refused to attend the disciplinary hearing, which they said was illegal.
In response to the suspension, Maqelepo wrote a letter addressing the BAP members in general, defying the committee’s decision to suspend them.
He has called for a special conference, appealing to party constituencies to push for it, citing the ongoing internal fight that includes the leadership’s decision to withdraw the BAP from the coalition government.
Maqelepo also said the central executive committee is illegally in a campaign to dissolve committees in the constituencies and replace them with stooges.
He reminded the members that there is a court case pending in the High Court seeking an interdiction to charge them in the party’s structures without approval of the special conference that he is calling.
He said the party leadership should have awaited the outcome of the case before proceeding with any disciplinary action.
“The party that is led by a professor of law continues to do dismissals despite the issue being taken to the courts,” Maqelepo said.
The party leader, Professor Nqosa Mahao, is a distinguished professor of law.
Maqelepo said they would write the central executive committee rejecting its decision to suspend them, saying they will continue taking part in party activities.
He said their fate in the party is in the hands of the special conference.
He appealed to all the party constituencies to continue writing letters demanding the special conference.
Both Maqelepo and Kibane received letters on November 28 last year inviting them to show cause why they should not be suspended pending their hearing.
They both responded on the following day refusing to attend.
Maqelepo, Kibane, Hilda Van Rooyen, and ’Mamoipone Senauoane are accused of supporting a move to remove Professor Mahao from his ministerial position last year.
They were part of the BAP members who asked Prime Minister Sam Matekane to fire Professor Mahao, who at the same time was pushing for the reshuffling of Tankiso Phapano, the principal secretary for the Ministry of Energy.
When Matekane ignored Professor Mahao’s demands, the latter withdrew the BAP from the coalition government much to the fierce resistance of the party’s four MPs.
Maqelepo started touting members from constituencies to call for a special conference to reverse Professor Mahao and the central executive committee’s decision.
The central executive committee issued a circular stopping Maqelepo’s rallies but he continued, with the support of the other MPs.
In the BAP caucus of six MPs, it is only Professor Mahao and ’Manyaneso Taole who are supporting the withdrawal from the government.
Nkheli Liphoto
Knives out for Molelle
Massive salary hike for chiefs
Maqelepo says suspension deeply flawed
Initiation boys sexually molested
Battle for top DC post erupts
The ‘side job’ of sex work
Manyokole, ‘Bikerboy’ cleared of fraud charges
Four struck by lightining
Tempers boil over passports
Big questions for Molelle
Jackals are hunting
Pressing the Knorx Stereo
The mouth
Ramakongoana off to World Athletics Championships
Ramalefane request unsettles Matlama
Weekly Police Report
Reforms: time to change hearts and minds
The middle class have failed us
Coalition politics are bad for development
No peace plan, no economic recovery
Professionalising education
We have lost our moral indignation
Academic leadership, curriculum and pedagogy
Mokeki’s road to stardom
DCEO raids PS’
Literature and reality
Bringing the spark back to schools
The ABC blew its chance
I made Matekane rich: Moleleki
Musician dumps ABC
Bofuma, boimana li nts’a bana likolong
BNP infighting
Mahao o seboko ka ho phahama hoa litheko
Contract Farming Launch
7,5 Million Dollars For Needy Children
Ba ahileng lipuleng ba falle ha nakoana
Ba ahileng lipuleng ba falle ha nakoana
Weekly Police Report
Mahao o re masholu a e ts’oareloe
‘Our Members Voted RFP’ Says Metsing
SENATE OPENS
Matekane’s 100 Days Plan
High Profile Cases in Limbo
130 Law Students Graduate From NUL
Metsing and Mochoboroane Case Postponed
ADVERTISEMENT
Trending
-
News1 month ago
I have nothing to hide, says Lehlanya
-
Sports4 weeks ago
Likuena Faces Uphill Battle in CHAN Qualifiers
-
Business2 months ago
More US funding for development projects
-
News1 month ago
Winners set for Champions League
-
News2 weeks ago
Plight of refugees in Lesotho
-
Business1 month ago
Demystifying death benefit nomination
-
Business1 month ago
Take a Break from Summer
-
Business2 months ago
Breaking barriers to trade for women