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Dr Imtiaz Sooliman accuses politicians of 'serving themselves, not the people'

Chevon Booysen|Updated

Dr. Imtiaz Sooliman, founder of Gift of the Givers, speaks candidly about South Africa's governance crisis during an interview on Tuesday. The humanitarian leader criticised coalition politics and dysfunctional municipalities, calling for citizens to form a "coalition of civil society" ahead of the 2026 local government elections.

Image: Ayanda Ndamane / Independent Media

CRITIQUE

In a scathing critique of South Africa's coalition politics, Gift of the Givers (GoTG) founder Dr. Imtiaz Sooliman has called out dysfunctional municipalities and political infighting that leaves millions of citizens underserved. 

Speaking candidly this week about the state of governance in the country, Sooliman highlighted how power struggles and personal agendas have trumped service delivery, leaving critical decisions—including the national budget—hanging in the balance.

The philanthropist stated: “The country is tired of promises, no delivery, corruption and nothing being done about it.”

Sooliman said revelations from KZN police commissioner Lt-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, who had made damning allegations against high-ranking police officials and politicians, were a “game changer”. 

“The fact that the rot is being exposed is a good thing. People are becoming more conscious and wanting to do things the right way. All these commissions show that people are taking notice. People say government is corrupt. Government is not corrupt, there are people inside of government that are corrupt.

"Don’t restrict leadership, to political leadership. Leadership is about community. There are a lot of good guys that don’t surface and that comes from every sector of society."

Sooliman said while there are ethical problems, there are also good people trying to do the right thing. 

“The problem is the good guys don’t talk. And now the commissions are coming out. What Mkhwanazi is doing is giving strength to those guys and saying let’s not be afraid anymore. It’s breaking the fear factor,” said Dr Sooliman.

Reflecting on a recent interview he gave where he referred to a “government of selective unity”, he said he maintains his view on coalition governments, adding that GoTG is focused on fixing the country and is not focused on politics. 

“How many municipalities are non-functional? Because politicians are not interested in the country, they are interested in their own egos. Like I said, there are a few good people but you’ll do anything to show up leaders of your party. If you are really committed, let’s work together. 

“Today it’s about showing ‘you’re the bad guy’. It’s always about power, never about the people and this system cannot work. They can’t take a decision, I mean look at the passing of the budget, the most important thing in the country and they can’t pass a budget?"

Sooliman said the unfortunate reality was that when there is a problem and ''three or five people can’t get along, 65 million people pay the price'.

"That cannot work. When you come to government, ask yourself one question - are you coming to serve the people or are you coming to serve yourself? If you are coming to serve yourself, you came to the wrong place,” said Sooliman.

He urged citizens to vote in the upcoming 2026 local government elections and to vote for changemakers in their community, who serve in various structures. 

“Show the political parties a point that if they can’t deliver, you can do it yourself. Then call it a coalition of civil society and at some point it will pass throughout the country. If we do that you will put fear into the guys who have an interest in themselves. At the end of the day we have to choose our own person to serve us,” said Sooliman.