State to pay R1.2m to each Esidimeni family
THE rights of mentally ill patients and their families were flagrantly violated and disregarded during the Life Esidimeni debacle‚ retired deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke said in a scathing judgment yesterday.
“All the facts here point to cruelty‚” he said on the final day of arbitration hearings into the tragedy in which he said victims and their families had to be compensated.
Families of the mental patients treated cruelly by government must each receive payments of R20 000 for their funeral expenses‚ R180 000 for shock and psychological trauma and R1-million in constitutional damages.
The government is supposed to pay the compensation in a lump sum no later than three months from yesterday.
Moseneke said although the arbitration was unusual‚ it was intended to give closure to families.
As a sign of respect the former chief justice read out the names of the victims of the marathon project.
Mentally ill and vulnerable patients were stripped of their dignity‚ subjected to torture at illequipped NGOs and abandoned by arrogant provincial health authorities who abused their power and lied about the scale of the catastrophe‚ he said.
The hearings were held after at least 144 psychiatric patients died amid the movement of 1 711 mentally ill people from Life Esidimeni homes into ill-equipped and underfunded NGOs in 2016 in Gauteng.
Moseneke said more than 1 400 of the patients had survived “torturous conditions”. Some had been transported on the back of trucks like cattle‚ others did not receive their medication and some appeared to have starved to death.
Gauteng’s former health MEC Qedani Mahlangu was singled out for denying that she was responsible for the deaths‚ claiming instead that senior officials had lied to her.
“On all accounts she was at the helm of the marathon project.
“She was the ultimate leader and commander‚” said Moseneke. She was aware of the risks‚ and brushed aside warnings that death might and did ensue.
“Her plea of ignorance … is patently untrue‚” he said. Her conduct was irrational and “she acted with impunity‚ thinking that she could get away with it”‚ he said.
He said that affected families were entitled to compensation for constitutional damages.
“This is a matter of massive proportion‚” he said. In addition to compensation for funeral expenses‚ shock and psychological trauma‚ he said claimants were entitled to R1-million after their constitutional rights were violated.
Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi‚ in his testimony earlier to the hearings‚ said it was “one of the most painful and horrible events in the history of post-apartheid South Africa”.
“As Minister of Health‚ I wish to apologise unconditionally to the families and to all those who are still living. We have wronged them in a way unimaginable‚” he said.
Moseneke said the mass relocation from Life Esidimeni had left patients “isolated from their families”.
There were conflicting accounts during the hearings as to why patients were moved in the first place. Some officials testified that severe financial pressure on the department of health led to the mass relocation as a cost-saving measure. Mahlangu said under oath: “You rob Peter to pay Paul at any one time.”
Gauteng finance MEC Barbara Creecy‚ however‚ disagreed and said cost-cutting was never supposed to lead to the department stopping essential‚ core services.
Moseneke rejected the argument about cost cutting. Patients were moved “from place to place” and often without proper records or medication. Patients had no access to doctors‚ let alone psychiatrists.
He said top health officials in the province had devised a plan for the mass relocation of patients without the consent of their families.
They were loaded on buses and open trucks‚ some with their hands and feet bound.
Top provincial health officials‚ including Mahlangu‚ initially pleaded ignorance when people started dying. Moseneke said that Mahlangu‚ head of mental health directorate Dr Makgabo Manamela and then head of the department Dr Barney Selebano later “falsely” claimed ignorance about the scale of the catastrophe.
Mahlangu was concerned about the political implications.
Health ombudsman Dr Makgoba Malegapuru investigated the decision to close Life Esidimeni and presented his report to the public in February last year.
Moseneke said his findings were “spot on”.
The whereabouts of 44 patients remains unknown. Moseneke said he would donate all his arbitration fees to law schools.