Cape Argus

Premier urged to abandon separate quest for vaccine procuremen­t

- MWANGI GITHAHU mwangi.githahu@inl.co.za

THE provincial ANC has urged Premier Alan Winde to abandon his plans to try to procure vaccines, following the statement by Health Minister Zweli Mkhize that enough vaccines have been procured and there was no need for provinces to buy their own.

During the provincial budget in March, it was announced that the province had mobilised a R2.17 billion war chest to defeat Covid-19 in the Western Cape and that this would be spent on rolling out the vaccine, procuring the vaccine, and the response to a potential third wave of the pandemic.

In his briefing to Parliament’s portfolio committee on Wednesday, Mkhize said: “Enough vaccines have been procured for South Africa and all its provinces. The national government has bought vaccines on behalf of the country, after calculatin­g the needs of provinces.

“There is no need for provinces to buy their own vaccines and if the province buys vaccines, it would amount to fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e.”

Leader of the provincial opposition Cameron Dugmore (ANC) said: “The ANC in the legislatur­e is on record through our health spokespers­on, Rachel Windvogel, saying that Winde is simply playing to the gallery, wasting resources, and creating divisions and confusion by saying that the Western Cape will procure its own vaccines.

“Winde has been under instructio­n from his DA federal leader, John Steenhuise­n, to embark on this route purely for party political posturing. To try and show the DA in a better light. I call on Winde to abandon this plan immediatel­y. It makes no sense. It is not needed. It is already diverting resources and energy to serve a party-political agenda,” said Dugmore.

Dugmore said the ANC would ask the chairperso­n of the standing committee on public accounts, Lulama Mvimbi, to engage with the auditorgen­eral on the matter, and place it on the agenda of the next Covid-19 ad hoc committee meeting on May 19.

In response to the criticism, Winde said: “During Minister Mkhize’s recent visit, he advised us that the national vaccine procuremen­t programme will see a total of 46 million vaccines procured for the country, of which approximat­ely 4.7 million will be allocated for the Western Cape.

“We welcome the minister’s reassuranc­e in this regard. Our teams stand ready to vaccinate as many residents as possible, as quickly as possible, so that we can save more lives and prevent undue severe illness ahead of a third – and possible fourth – wave.

“That said, as a risk mitigation strategy, we will continue to keep our vaccine acquisitio­n team engaged. This is the responsibl­e thing to do, noting our duty to our residents to ensure that vaccines are available.”

Winde said the province’s risk mitigation approach would give residents the best chance to stay safe and move forward.

He said the province cared about the well-being and dignity of residents, and believed a successful mass vaccinatio­n strategy was the only way to beat the Covid-19 virus, save lives and save the economy.

 ??  ?? CAMERON Dugmore
CAMERON Dugmore

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