Cape Times

Patient’s family wants answers

- Siyavuya Mzantsi

FATHER-of-six Teteteke Gqontsi did not die as a result of the surgery for which he was admitted at Stellenbos­ch Hospital, where his body was discovered in an isolated area in the ceiling at the facility.

This is according to the 61-year-old’s family, following their meeting with the hospital’s management on Friday.

Gqontsi’s brother Christmas Khethwane yesterday said they were left to conclude that foul play had occurred.

According to the Health Department, Gqontsi was admitted to Stellenbos­ch Hospital on October 5 after he underwent abdominal surgery.

A nurse attending to him had left to get clean linen when Gqontsi disappeare­d.

He was found by workers doing renovation­s at the hospital on October 20.

“They (hospital management) said it was clear that my brother did not die as a result of natural causes.

“He died as a result of something and was placed where he was found,” said Khethwane.

“We suspect that someone may have placed him there. They say the autopsy results have come out, but there were some still outstandin­g.

“They will wait for those results to determine whether it was the hospital that killed him or the doctor or even the nurse, because clearly he did not die as a result of his health problems.

“We will wait for them. They must take responsibi­lity.

“If the hospital is guilty of anything, they must do something,” he said.

He said it was not explained to them how Gqontsi disappeare­d despite a security presence at the hospital.

“He disappeare­d under their own guard and was subsequent­ly found in their

We suspect that someone may have placed him there. They say the autopsy results have come out.

facility in an area he couldn’t have accessed by himself.

“They are puzzled by how he went missing.

“It was the manager of the hospital that we met with that day.

“As we prepare for his funeral, they advised us to keep all the receipts of the things that we will buy for his funeral,” he said.

The provincial health department said constructi­on work was currently being carried out at the hospital, which also contribute­d to the difficulty of the search.

The department’s spokespers­on, Mark van der Heever, yesterday said all queries around the investigat­ion, both from the media and the family, should be addressed to the SAPS.

“We have assisted the family and will continue to do so. The autopsy has been completed, and the cause of death will be shared with the investigat­ion officer.

“The circumstan­ces around the patient’s disappeara­nce currently forms part of the investigat­ion by the SAPS,” he said.

Approached for comment, police spokespers­on Andre Traut would only say: “Kindly be advised that the death inquest case docket is still under investigat­ion.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa