George building collapse: Building council and contractor under fire

The focus of the George building disaster has now turned to the NHBRC officials and the contractor, Liatel Developments.

A significant development came to light in the investigation of the George building disaster that took place almost a year ago, on May 6, 2024.

George Herald reports that Human Settlements Minister Thembi Simelane reported to Parliament on April 4 that some National Home Builders Registration Council (NHBRC) officials had manipulated the systems, ignored missing documentation, and even used unauthorised login credentials to approve the project, exposing systemic failures within the council.

The collapse of the five-storey residential development Neo Victoria resulted in 34 deaths, leaving 28 survivors.

The focus has now turned to the NHBRC officials and the contractor, Liatel Developments, who have been referred to the police for a criminal investigation.

Police spokesperson Sergeant Chris Spies said the matter is the subject of an ongoing police probe, saying the docket will be referred to the National Prosecuting Authority for a decision once their investigation is concluded.

This is what the former construction site currently looks like. Photo: Michelle Pienaar

An independent probe commissioned by the NHBRC uncovered serious lapses, revealing that the officials had failed to follow proper procedures, including approving a multi-storey building that was initially registered as a single-storey structure without conducting adequate technical assessments or site inspections.

The contractor, owned by Theuns Kruger, has also been implicated, with evidence suggesting construction had begun without the required NHBRC enrolment certificate.

Liatel Developments

While Kruger denies liability and plans legal action against those he holds responsible, Simelane confirmed that both the NHBRC officials and Liatel Developments are now under police scrutiny for potential criminal charges, including culpable homicide.

IOL reported that in an exclusive interview with the Cape Argus, Kruger said they were co-operating with authorities, including the NHBRC, and maintained that the company was not liable for the building tragedy.

Kruger asserted that Liatel Developments was not responsible for critical administrative failures, particularly the enrolment process with the NHBRC. He claimed his company’s name was used without consent by the developer, Neo Victoria Developments, during the NHBRC registration, a process he says Liatel was not directly involved in managing.

 

Breaking news at your fingertips… Follow Caxton Network News on Facebook and join our WhatsApp channel.

Nuus wat saakmaak. Volg Caxton Netwerk-nuus op Facebook en sluit aan by ons WhatsApp-kanaal.

Read original story on www.georgeherald.com

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Network News in Google News and Top Stories.

Ally Cooper

Passionate storyteller with over 30 years’ experience as a journalist, editor, proofreader, content creator, social media manager and public relations and media liaison specialist.
Back to top button