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Manoeuvering around SA Aids Council leadership vacuum

Within days, the SA National AIDS Council (SANAC) will have no CEO and there are fears that powerful individuals within the council intend to take advantage of the leadership vacuum for their own gain, reports Health-e News.

According to a wide range of activists in the HIV sector, who are concerned about the lack of transparency involved in appointing a new CEO, the SANAC board gave current CEO Fareed Abdullah two weeks’ notice that his contract would not be renewed at the end of this month.

The board still has not selected a replacement CEO although candidates were initially shortlisted before the post was re-advertised.

The report says it is alleged that Abdullah does not see eye-to-eye with top-ranking health department officials, although this has been denied by deputy director general Dr Yogan Pillay. However, SANAC deputy chair Steve Letsike has also clashed with Abdullah and ignored his requests for her to sign the declaration of interests form required by SANAC board members. Letsike, who represents civil society at SANAC, is a powerful player within the council and also sits on the SANAC Board.

Elections for 18 new civil society sector representatives are due to start next week amid claims that Letsike is ensuring that her supporters are elected. Abdullah confirmed that Letsike had not signed the declaration, but declined to comment on his reappointment.

The report says the SANAC board has also approved an amount of almost half a million rand to be paid to Letsike for her duties as deputy chair. However, SANAC’s Trust Deed document appears to prohibit such a financial undertaking, stating that: “No portion of the Trust Fund shall at any time be distributed to any of the Trustees (in whatever capacity), and there shall be no contracts for the provision of services by trustees.

The report says Letsike and SANAC’s higher education sector representative, Dr Ramneek Ahluwalia, have been accused of using their positions within SANAC to lobby for government contracts. Ahluwalia is the current CEO of the Higher Education and Training HIV/AIDS Programme (HEAIDS), a government position, which precludes him from doing business with government. He also applied for the SANAC CEO post.

The report says Ahluwalia failed to respond to any questions sent to him and said he could not speak when contacted by phone. However, an email he sent to Section27 executive director Mark Heywood says he denies that he is in business with Letsike. “I personally have no business with her or something of that kind. However she has worked with my wife on their individual basis [sic],” Ahluwalia wrote in the email last month.

According to the report, a Companies and Intellectual Property Commission search shows Letsike and Ahluwalia as active directors in a company called Media Cliq. Letsike and Ravinder Kaur Ahluwalia are also listed as active directors of Kopanong Trading Enterprises. “When you don’t disclose this to anyone and lie about it, it makes one question your motives,” said Heywood, who described their lobbying for health department business as a “serious conflict of interest”.

The report says on 25 February last year, Ahluwalia and Letsike pitched a business proposition to the director general of health, Precious Matsoso under the auspices of Media Cliq. This has been confirmed by Soul City CEO Lebogang Ramafoko, and a health department staff member, who were present at the meeting. Letsike and Ahluwalia proposed to screen health shows on television sets in clinics and get private advertising to cover the costs. Mindset and Wellness TV have been doing this for a number of years. The following day, the pair presented the same business proposal to the National Health Council. Some sources said their proposal is currently being piloted in KwaZulu-Natal, but this was not confirmed.

Letsike also runs a non-governmental organisation, Access Chapter Two, which apparently gets financial support from SANAC donors. According to a source, she has refused to provide the financial statements for Access Chapter Two despite requests from the SANAC Board.

The report says Letsike referred all questions to her lawyer, while Ahluwalia has failed to respond to all attempts to reach him. Letsike’s lawyer, Michael Bill, failed to meet the six-hour time extension he was given to respond. When he finally responded, he said: “A personal attack and/or the singling out of our client for acts or actions for an entire body of persons would cast undue attention on our client. This attention, which our client submits is undue, could jeopardise our client’s chances of re-election.” He added that Letsike was not the only SANAC board member who had failed to sign the declaration, that she had solicited business from government but denied that she was in business with Ahluwalia.

SANAC Civil Society Forum elections will be held in the second week of February and sources are concerned Letsike is controlling the process to ensure that her allies will be elected as sector leaders.

The report says the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) has requested that the Independent Electoral Commission takes control over these elections to ensure they are fair but Letsike and her allies have allegedly resisted this.

The report says Abdullah’s imminent departure has upset some HIV activists who are concerned it will damage the work SANAC is mandated to do: namely hold the government to account for its HIV response, which boasts the largest antiretroviral programme in the world and is responsible for the health of the almost seven million HIV-infected South Africans.

TAC general secretary Anele Yawa said Abdullah’s sudden departure “is not in the best interests of SANAC or people living with HIV – in fact, it will do great harm to both”.

[link url="https://www.health-e.org.za/2017/01/30/aids-council-disarray-ceo-exit/"]Health-e News report[/link]

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