News Articles

SA Consul in Los Angeles Latest Diplomat to Cause Uproar

Source: SA People, 10/11/2020


The latest, according to a report in the Sunday Times today, is the
consul general in Los Angeles, Thandile Sunduza, who is alleged to
have rejected more than 30 properties offered to her by her own
department, the department of international relations and co-operation
(DIRCO), and wants something on the elite Rodeo Drive in Beverly
Hills. She was apparently accused of making other demands, being
“uncouth” and lacking a full grasp of her job.
It is one of many such stories about staff in South African embassies,
especially those who are not career diplomats but have been given or,
according to a recent letter to DIRCO, bought the job. During the
Jacob Zuma years, cadres, sometimes failed politicians or people who
allegedly had some dirt on Zuma, were sent out to fill the highest
posts of ambassador.
The DIRCO Minister Naledi Pandor, appointed by President Cyril
Ramaphosa, is now left with the fallout, embassies that for a decade
have not only been dysfunctional but often don’t have a boss.
SAPeople, in dealing with the issues of South Africans abroad, has on
numerous occasions tried to get information out of embassies, many
times without success, or, in the case of the high commissioner in
London, Nomatemba Tambo, a curt message saying “I’m afraid I don’t
intend to engage in an ongoing dialogue on such issues.” These are
civil servants, mind you, paid for by citizens’ taxes.

The Sunday Times report will come as little surprise to South Africans
living in the LA area who have been struggling for months to elicit
any response or support from the SA Consulate despite continued phone
calls, emails and even visits to the office.
For one South African, whose passport expired at the end of September
2020, he has been battling to hear back since January when he
submitted his renewal application. (Sunduza has apparently been in the
LA post since around February.)
“Due to Covid, I expected a delay, but I haven’t been able to get in
touch with anybody at the Consulate for months,” he told SAPeople in
August. In mid-September he was finally sent a letter stating that
consulate members were working remotely and requesting patience. The
letter was “not reassuring”, didn’t address his renewal, and gave no
indication of when services would be properly administered again.
“I called the person who sent the letter, using the phone number in
his signature of the letter, and surprisingly he answered. He was
working from home, but unfortunately didn’t have any additional
information.”
In a subsequent call he was informed that “they are still working from
home and they have no idea when they will receive diplomatic bags with
renewed passports. In the meantime my passport has expired which
leaves me in limbo. I just can’t believe they don’t have a simpler
system to streamline these kind of things.”
Today he told SAPeople: “Still waiting unfortunately. I did email them
last week at the Consulate and they told me that they are still
working remotely but that they have been receiving diplomatic bags
with documents. I guess I’ll just continue to wait. They said to email
Home Affairs in South Africa for any further updates which I did twice
with no response.”
A South African in Seattle shared her similar frustrating experience
with SAPeople, with no luck receiving a response from the LA
consulate, her nearest foreign mission. “I’ve tried calling several
times when the office is reported to be open by their website
(9am-12pm) and either get cut off or it goes to voice mail that never
gets a response. I’ve also re-sent my questions by email and haven’t
had a response.
“It’s frustrating because we South Africans are entitled to a passport
and mine has now expired (in early August). I can’t even access a list
of instructions for how to apply for a new passport â€` from the LA
consulate website.”
The desperate South African in Seattle finally found a list of
requirements for renewing her passport on the Washington D.C. website,
and submitted her new passport application and payment to the LA
office. According to UPS, her package was successfully delivered… but
she has still not heard anything from the Consulate.
She told SAPeople today: “Ten years ago when I last made a passport
application, the LA office was helpful and answered emails with
questions almost immediately. They also previously let me know when
passport application materials were received and that they were all in
order.”
Expats in the United Kingdom are suffering the same headaches, where
the website has been down since mid-August, phone calls lead to a
“dead end”, and emails are ignored. Many South Africans are asking if
the way they are being treated by the very people who have been
appointed to support them, is even legal.
The high commissioner, Nomatemba Tambo, briefly answered SAPeople
questions on behalf of South Africans in the UK in August, but when we
followed up for clearer answers, she sent a curt message, “I’m afraid
I don’t intend to engage in an ongoing dialogue on such issues.” She
added that “whatever operational inconveniences our nationals are
experiencing will be resolved in due course as I stated yesterday.”
That was on 20 August. Two months later, and the problems seem to be
increasing, judging by the cries for help we receive daily from South
Africans in the UK who cannot get hold of their embassy. (In the past
week we have again written to Ms Tambo and her office several times,
in search of answers for these South Africans. She has not replied.)
No longer able to download application forms, South Africans in the UK
have to send postal requests for the forms to be sent to them. The
SAHC states the forms will be sent within 5 business days, but many
are still waiting after a month. One expat in London told SAPeople:
“It appears SAHC have effectively stopped servicing SA citizens in the
U.K. and I wonder if there is not some breach of law or responsibility
in this regard that can be investigated?”
DA Shadow Deputy Minister of Home Affairs, Adrian Roos, said in a
recent podcast for South Africans abroad that he will raise the urgent
matter in Parliament of the UK website being down.
Across the world, almost guaranteed problems await any South African
citizen wanting to get a passport. Inaction or inefficiency from Home
Affairs and DIRCO belies the fact that South Africa has plenty of
embassies and representatives in over 100 countries (117 heads of
delegation, according to the DIRCO website, 14 of which are vacant).
Delays for passports and other documents last for up to six months,
sometimes over a year, due mainly to an archaic system, which in many
cases is run inefficiently, in which applications are sent in
diplomatic bags to DIRCO in South Africa, before being sent to Home
Affairs to process… and then returned to DIRCO to send back to
overseas missions. (Roos points out that so much time could be saved
by the larger missions offering online applications, similar to the
procedure within SA.)
As many as 70 percent of South Africa’s heads of mission are
apparently political appointments, often with no training to run an
embassy abroad. As recently as this year former human settlements
minister Nomaindia Mfeketo was appointed ambassador to the United States.
South Africa’s former ambassador to the Netherlands, Bruce Koloane,
was recalled last year (and then resigned) after he gave evidence at
the state capture enquiry about his involvement in the controversial
Gupta plane landing at Waterkloof Air Force Base in 2015.
In 2016 Sibisiso Ndebele was recalled as high commissioner in
Australia because of allegedly getting R10 million in kickbacks from
tenders when he was a minister. The charges were withdrawn in 2018 and
he is now high commissioner in India.
In the same year (2016), SA was embarrassed by the revelation that its
high commissioner to Singapore â€` Hazel Francis Ngubeni (55) â€` had
withheld the fact that she was jailed in New York for a couple of
years for smuggling cocaine. In Singapore drug trafficking can lead to
the death penalty. Ngubeni, who was formerly an SAA air stewardess,
was jailed between 1999 and 2001… but omitted to disclose the
conviction when nominated for her role in Singapore in 2013. DIRCO
subsequently withdrew her security clearance and her employment
contract was terminated.
Zindzi Mandela, the late daughter of Nelson and Winnie Mandela, and
former ambassador to Denmark, was often in the news for undiplomatic
statements, most notably her apparent support for the Economic Freedom
Fighters.
In October Peter Fabricius reported in Daily Maverick that South
Africa’s deputy ambassador to Sudan, Zabantu Ngcobo, and her partner
were being investigated for allegedly hiring the embassy driver and
his accomplice to kill the intelligence officer because he was sending
home damaging reports about Ngcobo.
SA ambassadors are reportedly paid a minimum annual salary of
R1-million, excluding living allowances, free accommodation and other
perks that can double that amount, according to BusinessInsider.
Sunduza, a former ANC MP with a degree in sports from the Vaal
University of Technology, worked for the Gauteng Department of Health
and its Department of Sports. She made headlines in 2014 when she wore
a tight canary-yellow dress to the opening of parliament that elicited
many negative remarks on social media, and she burnt the dress,
according to City Press, in 2015, saying “That dress was a flop and it
was the designer’s fault.” (The Mail & Guardian called her dress one
of 8 Things that Broke the Internet in 2014.)
Faced with the mounting problems and glaring issues at many foreign
missions, in June President Cyril Ramaphosa signed into a law the
Foreign Service Act, which “provides for the minimum requirements a
person must meet to qualify for transfer to a South African Mission
(and) regulates the appointment of Heads of Mission and the
requirements that such persons should have in order to be appointed.”
In October, the DA called on DIRCO to refer to the Zondo Commission
into State Capture allegations contained in a letter from diplomats
Francis Moloi and Nyameko Goso, dated 9 October 2020, which alleged
that the ranks of ambassadors, diplomats and senior officials were
filled with cadres and political appointments who were forced to make
donations to the ANC from the moment of appointment.
In the meantime, SAPeople has launched a petition to help South
Africans abroad receive a more efficient service. After our repeated
requests to DIRCO and Home Affairs officials fell on deaf or
deliberately blocked ears, SAPeople teamed up with the DA, who will be
able to raise the concerns in Parliament and effect urgent changes.
The petition already has over 8,000 signatures. It requires 20,000 in
order to be debated in Parliament. Previous petitions have had no
impact because they did not receive enough signatures, so it is vital
that this petition reaches its target.
www.samigration.com


Search
South Africa Immigration Company