Cape Times

Doctor annoys judge

- Brenda Masilela

THE suspended doctor who instructed patients to be transferre­d to unlicensed NGOs remains oblivious about the 59 patients who are still missing after being discharged from Life Esidemeni to be with their families.

The director of mental health services in Gauteng, Dr Makgoba Manamela, was questioned yesterday by advocate Lilla Crouse concerning the patients who were still unaccounte­d for.

“What happened to the 59 people who went missing?” Crouse asked.

“What I said is what I did,” Manamela responded.

“What did you enquired Crouse

“Should I explain again? What I did is what I said,” Manamela responded.

Retired deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke, presiding over the arbitratio­n hearings into the botched transfers which saw 143 patients die, some due to starvation and severe neglect, interjecte­d and asked Manamela how people were tracked if their names were not recorded.

Manamela outlined how the district co-ordinator kept their records, but insisted she did not know how 59 people went missing. do?”

“You are a public servant, you can’t just give any answer that comes to your mind.

‘‘These were human beings, they went missing… You were paid to do the work, you are not doing anybody a favour,” Moseneke remarked.

It was also heard that the National Health Education and Allied Workers Union (Nehawu) wanted Manamela removed as chief executive at Natalsprui­t Hospital, but she insisted that it was because they were not happy with the human resources process.

“The unions will always complain,” she said.

During the Life Esidimeni project, Manamela was in charge of issuing licences to NGOs, and according to her, only one NGO was operating without a licence.

But a subsequent investigat­ion has revealed that several of the NGOs were unlicensed.

Some of her duties involved her going to the facilities and inspecting whether the NGO was fit for purpose to cater for mentally ill patients.

Out of 27 centres, she went to only four. A total of 143 people died after they were relocated to these inadequate NGOs from Life Esidimeni.

Manamela continued to defend herself and said that she shouldn’t be blamed for the deaths. She said she accepted that families were angry with her because she signed licenses to NGOs where their loved ones died.

But she said she doesn’t agree that if she hadn’t issued licences to the NGOs people wouldn’t have died.

Manamela shocked the listeners when she said she only realised while testifying that issuing licences was wrong because according to her, everything was done within the law.

Advocate Dirk Groenewald, who is representi­ng some of the families, confronted Manamela on the fact that several NGOs licensed by her did not meet legal requiremen­ts.

But Manamela disputed Groenewald’s argument and insisted that she did not manipulate the licensing process.

Yesterday was Manamela’s fourth day on the witness stand and family members of some of the patients who died have strongly expressed their dissatisfa­ction with her.

 ?? Picture: Dimpho Maja/ANA ?? GRILLED: Former Gauteng director of mental health Dr Makgobo Manamela gives testimony at the Life Esidimeni arbitratio­n hearings in Parktown.
Picture: Dimpho Maja/ANA GRILLED: Former Gauteng director of mental health Dr Makgobo Manamela gives testimony at the Life Esidimeni arbitratio­n hearings in Parktown.

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