Government officials met with Zulu King Misuzulu kaZwelithini on Monday to request traditional leadership assistance in fighting criminal groups that extort construction contractors. Public Works Minister Dean Macpherson and provincial official Martin Meyer visited the eMashobeni Royal Palace in Pongola, where they outlined infrastructure plans facing disruption from organized syndicates demanding payoffs. The king agreed to help implement a social facilitation framework requiring community involvement in development projects.
Criminal networks frequently claim 30 percent or more from legitimate builders through threats and violence, causing expensive delays across the province. Macpherson described the policy framework as a tool allowing residents to protect local developments from illegal demands. The monarch expressed support for empowering communities and praised departmental initiatives. Officials discussed several major undertakings during their discussions, among them renovations of government structures in Ulundi, a 300-million-rand school improvement program, and a 1-billion-rand Durban courthouse modernization.
Both parties are committed to various infrastructure improvements and employment programs in rural regions. The king will personally launch a reformed public works initiative while officials plan cellular tower installations to expand digital access in remote districts.
Criminal networks frequently claim 30 percent or more from legitimate builders through threats and violence, causing expensive delays across the province. Macpherson described the policy framework as a tool allowing residents to protect local developments from illegal demands. The monarch expressed support for empowering communities and praised departmental initiatives. Officials discussed several major undertakings during their discussions, among them renovations of government structures in Ulundi, a 300-million-rand school improvement program, and a 1-billion-rand Durban courthouse modernization.
Both parties are committed to various infrastructure improvements and employment programs in rural regions. The king will personally launch a reformed public works initiative while officials plan cellular tower installations to expand digital access in remote districts.