Chairperson, I am sure that the hon Suka knows the history of the Wanderers Stadium. I know that this week the whole world is commemorating 70 years of holocaust in Germany between the Germans and the Jews. The consequences of that holocaust has a bearing on the establishment of the place we call Wanderers Stadium.
It cost a substantial amount of money to build a stadium of this magnitude and to maintain it before 1994. That is the first problem, hon Suka. People who used to handle these amounts are not happy now that they are not involved anymore. This is the first challenge that we are confronted with, that the South African Cricket Board, like all other boards must, have guidelines on building stadiums that will host big international games.
This was agreed to by the South African Cricket Board and the Gauteng Cricket Board. It will also sensitise people about the rules and regulations of playing in this stadium and in this country, and that the available money goes to every person with the right colour.
On the question of transformation, people will remember that in 1992, we celebrated the end of this quagmire that existed since 1975. But it did not stop in Gauteng. The constitution clearly states that, from the year before last, the board should not be made up of people from only one particular race. They must work together if they have not done that yet.
There is no transformation in the Gauteng Cricket Board. There is no development there because it is crystal clear that all the players of the Gauteng Cricket Board are not from Gauteng, they were bought from other areas. We recommended a six-member committee, and that is what we call transformation. We have done that and they are working on it, and we emphasised on the 1992 resolution of 50-50.]