Daily Dispatch

Top Health bosses irregularl­y appointed

Investigat­ion shows recruitmen­t processes flouted with senior posts not on organogram

- By ASANDA NINI

AFORENSIC investigat­ion into how eight senior health department officials were appointed has opened a can of worms of flouted recruitmen­t processes.

The confidenti­al report, seen by Saturday Dispatch, shows some health bosses at the department’s headquarte­rs in Bhisho, and in some regional offices, were appointed to non-existent posts, without vetting and in some cases without their qualificat­ions being checked.

The report further reveals that some documents supporting their employment were missing and no competency tests were conducted in some cases.

Appointmen­ts were made for some of the senior posts without being advertised as required by law.

The probe also uncovered that a junior employee had signed an appointmen­t letter for a senior official’s employment, while allegedly acting on behalf of his boss at the department headquarte­rs.

The probe by Integrated Forensic Accounting Services, completed late last year, came about after the National Education, Health and Allied Workers’ Union (Nehawu) raised concerns about how eight of the senior bosses had been employed.

According to the report, of the eight cases scrutinise­d by investigat­ors, only two were found to have been fully compliant with recruitmen­t processes.

This however was yesterday disputed by health department spokesman Sizwe Kupelo who said the forensic probe had only uncovered one case of irregular appointmen­t.

“The department indeed sanctioned an investigat­ion into the alleged irregular appointmen­t of eight employees.

“Of the eight cases, seven were found to have been appointed procedural­ly and therefore the allegation­s were unfounded.

“In the other case, the finding was that the appointmen­t was irregular and disciplina­ry processes were proposed for the irregular appointmen­t,” Kupelo said.

According to Kupelo, the deputy director-general for human resource and corporate services Karen Campbell “was subjected to a disciplina­ry process for the one case of an irregular appointmen­t”.

Kupelo said Campbell, who could not be reached yesterday, had been suspended and subsequent­ly resigned.

Most of the appointmen­ts were for senior administra­tors at the Bhisho head office, while others were for the Amathole and Buffalo City Metro regions.

The probe, which is yet to be made public, further reveals how the department’s human resource department and its filing system for the records of those employed, was in a total shambles.

It reveals a trail of missing employment records and incomplete documentar­y proof for those already in the system.

As a result, investigat­ors expressed frustratio­n to health MEC Dr Phumza Dyantyi, urging her to “take disciplina­ry steps against officials in charge of maintainin­g these records”.

“The investigat­ion shows that there were instances where the procedures and or policies have not been properly observed.

“At the commenceme­nt of this investigat­ion we requested, from the human resource section, certain documentat­ion relevant to the recruitmen­t and or appointmen­t and related matters of certain officials.

“Selected documentat­ion was provided. However a number of key documents were not made available. Several follow-ups were made, but as at the date of this report, important informatio­n remains outstandin­g.

“This shows that a number of irregulari­ties had occurred within the department’s human resources unit,” states the report.

The affected employees cannot be named as none could be reached for their comment at the time of writing.

Some occupy top positions at director and deputy director levels in finance, human resources, supply chain management, informatio­n and communicat­ion technology, and a senior manager in the office of provincial superinten­dent-general Dr Thobile Mbengashe.

Some were appointed “abnormally” into positions that did not appear on the department’s official organogram structure, posts which were never advertised, and others in posts already occupied by other officials.

Some of their qualificat­ions and references were “never verified”, while records of their vetting by the National Intelligen­ce Agency could not be obtained, according to the report.

In one case it was found that the recruitmen­t panel “deviated” from requiremen­ts for a senior post, to accommodat­e an official who did not possess the necessary minimum requiremen­ts.

Kupelo confirmed that most of the implicated employees were appointed to posts that were “not on the organogram”.

“However that is not an irregulari­ty, it is provided for within the department of public service and administra­tion prescripts that appointmen­ts can be made on posts additional to the establishm­ent when such posts have been deemed necessary,” he said.

Nehawu’s deputy secretary for the Max Madlingozi region Khonaye Gxaleka yesterday said the investigat­ion came about after the union raised the irregulari­ties.

He said he was pleased their allegation­s were proved factual by the probe, but said the matter still needed to be dealt with internally.

“All that we are pursuing is clean governance. No one in their sober senses could be happy when people are employed not according to the book, and without transparen­cy.

“What we are saying is that clean governance should start at the top because our managers, as drivers of the department, cannot be talking left, while the direction they take is going towards the right,” said Gxaleka. — asandan@dispatch.co.za

 ??  ?? CAN OF WORMS: A forensic report shows some health bosses at the department’s headquarte­rs in Bhisho were appointed to non-existent posts
CAN OF WORMS: A forensic report shows some health bosses at the department’s headquarte­rs in Bhisho were appointed to non-existent posts

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