Sector charter for the defence industry agreed

10th February 2017 By: Keith Campbell - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

Stakeholders in the country’s defence industry have adopted the Defence Sector Charter, which is intended to promote black economic empowerment (BEE) in the sector. The decision was taken at a recent stakeholder consultation session, which was attended by industry experts, suppliers, trade union representatives, representatives of military veterans, and officials from the Department of Defence and Military Veterans, defence acquisition and disposals agency Armscor and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

The next steps will be the presentation of the charter to the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and to the National Defence Industry Council. The Minister will then forward it to the Minister of Trade and Industry; thereafter the DTI will publish it for 60 days for further public comment, after which it will be gazetted as the Defence Sector Code.

“We are pleased with the extensive and robust consultation that has been undertaken to develop the defence sector charter,” stated Armscor CEO Kevin Wakeford. “There is an equivalent commitment by all to ensure that the defence industry is a leading sector in developing cutting-edge technology, as well as in terms of inclusive economic participation . . . our economy will not grow exponentially without collaborative efforts aimed at fighting unemployment, inequality and poverty.”

“The charter will no doubt assist in accelerating transformation in the defence industry,” affirmed Department of Defence and Military Veterans industry governance director and charter steering committee chairperson Trevor Mketi. Both he and Wakeford thanked all those involved in the creation of the charter.

The deputy chairperson of the defence charter steering committee, Advocate Vuyisa Ramphele, urged all stakeholders to make further submissions regarding the charter, before it is promulgated. She particularly referred to military veterans, women and the youth. “This will ensure that all input from different stakeholders is considered,” she said.

In addition to Mketi, Ramphele and Wakeford, the charter steering committee is composed of South African Aerospace, Maritime and Defence Industries Association (AMD) executive director Simphiwe Hamilton, AMD BEE/small, medium-sized and microenterprise/skills development committee chairperson Isaac Motale, Denel Group supply chain executive Dennis Mlambo, Armscor marketing and business development GM Lulu Mzili, Armscor senior manager: legal services Meshack Teffo, Armscor BEE division senior manager Nomkhosi Magwaza, Armscor military veterans coordinator Pumlani Kubukeli and DTI BEE/stakeholder engagement and partnership director Jacob Maphutha.