SA to prioritise food security, economic growth in G20 presidency, says Ramaphosa
President Cyril Ramaphosa and Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize, who is on special leave. Picture: Jacques Nelles
The National Assembly voted on all the budget votes in a long sitting on Friday, after a heated Portfolio Committee on Health meeting earlier in the morning.
Mkhize was supposed to appear before the committee to explain the Digital Vibes contract but failed to do so, citing legal advice while the matter is investigated by the Special Investigating Unit (SIU).
Opposition MPs were furious, but the ANC contingent on the committee backed Mkhize’s decision.
When the health budget vote came up several hours later, tempers in the opposition benches had hardly cooled down.
DA MP Siviwe Gwarube said: “All that a country needs is a government that works for its people, a government that will ensure that public money is spent to deliver services, a government that will rise to the occasion in times of crises. And a government that will get things done.
“One of the greatest injustices of our time is the fact that we have an albatross around our necks – the ANC government. It is stacked to the rafters with thieves, looters and cheats and people too selfish to spare a thought for those who elected them. During the world’s deadliest pandemic, South Africa’s government leaders decided that it is their time to eat.”
She said the SIU had confirmed that more than R14 billion in Covid-19 corruption was being investigated, and that it was the worst wave of corruption they had ever seen.
“And so, 15 months after this pandemic reached our shores, we sit with a minister who has grave allegations hanging over him. Allegations that he facilitated and awarded a contract worth hundreds of millions of rands to his friends for his benefit.
“We have a president so in denial of the state of his party and the government that he leads, he is as effective as a fly-swatter in a nuclear war. We have ANC members in Parliament who are more concerned with toeing the party line and retaining their seats than the people who sent them here.”
EFF MP Suzan Thembekwayo said her party “harshly condemns” Ramaphosa, Mkhize and the entire executive for “preserving themselves and their reputation at the cost of our people”.
“People in South Africa are still under the deception that by next year February, 40 million people will be vaccinated, while the minister of finance has not made available adequate funds for that to be done,” she said.
Thembekwayo also referred to the SIU’s investigation into PPE corruption.
“All this is happening with Minister Zweli Mkhize at the forefront of this department. He claims to be in the know about everything, except the corruption. This country doesn’t deserve a minister that is ignorant, deft and complicit in the thuggery that sustains poverty and hopelessness.
“In the midst of a global pandemic, with thousands of people dying, the third wave having reached us and [with it] once again ravaging lives, people losing jobs, children being left as orphans and losing access to quality education, the ANC government boldly decided to steal from the people with no reservation and consequence.”
She called on Mkhize to step down.
“If you can’t appear before the PC of Health, or you no longer respond to questions of members of Parliament, if you are part and parcel of corruption scandals, fail to deliver vaccines and mislead the country about it and failed to reach the target you set for yourself, save us from yourself and leave office.”
She said the Portfolio Committee on Health was complicit in the department’s failures.
FF Plus MP Phillip van Staden said the Digital Vibes case was “haunting” Mkhize and called on him to “step up and provide clarity before the SIU report is released”.
He said confidence in the government was at an all-time low due to the corruption that had occurred in this department.
Van Staden also said that the Public Protector had started with a legal process against Mkhize after he failed to answer a subpoena on three occasions.
ACDP MP Marie Sukers said allegations of corruption had prevented a unified response to the pandemic.
“It is eating away at the resolve and belief of people in government, and we have to act decisively to deal with it,” she said.
“The irony is, of course, that the department paid R150 million for the staging of communication, rather than comprehensive communication to fight this pandemic.”
ANC MP Kenneth Jacobs delivered a declaration on behalf of the ANC. He made no mention of Mkhize.
The House passed the budget, with 202 votes in favour and 120 against.
Ramaphosa on Thursday told journalists that he was dealing with the Digital Vibes matter and that it would not be swept under the carpet.
Meanwhile, insiders claim that Mkhize is preparing to leave office.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.