Cape Argus

Outrage at delays in rebuilding of hospital

Little progress on GF Jooste after 7 years

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

THE opposition in the legislatur­e said it was shocked at the delays regarding the rebuilding of the GF Jooste Hospital, also known as the Klipfontei­n Hospital, in Manenberg.

The facility was decommissi­oned in 2014. It was meant to be rebuilt, but seven years later there has been little progress and the provincial Department of Health still has no idea when it will be rebuilt.

Following the standing committee on health’s discussion of the 2021 adjustment­s budget, ANC provincial health spokespers­on Rachel Windvogel said she was shocked by the delay.

She also queried why the department had failed to spend the R10 million that had been set aside as part of the process of rebuilding GF Jooste.

“In March, we were told the process would be completed in 2030. These delays have definitely pushed this date further back.

“The people of Manenberg, Gugulethu and surroundin­g areas will continue to suffer until after 2030 as the government is not serious about rebuilding GF Jooste Hospital,” Windvogel said.

This was another indication that poor people’s lives did not matter to the province, she said.

Before its decommissi­oning GF Jooste was the only hospital serving the Klipfontei­n area, which comprises Manenberg, Gugulethu and Nyanga.

Community activist Roegshanda Pascoe said: “Everything we foresaw with the closure of the hospital all that time ago has come to pass.”

She said that since the hospital was closed, residents had to travel to a hospital in Heideveld, which she said was more like an emergency hospital or stabilisat­ion centre.

Pascoe said that from there patients were sent to Groote Schuur, Mitchells Plain or New Somerset hospitals.

Last month, during scrutiny of the department’s annual report, Windvogel had asked for an update on the GF Jooste Hospital.

On that occasion, head of health Dr Keith Cloete said the hospital was one of three, the others being Belhar Hospital and Helderberg Hospital, that were being prioritise­d.

He said a contract had been advertised for the building but there had been an “objection” to the process which had resulted in the contract not being awarded.

Yesterday, department spokespers­on Mark van der Heever said the contract for the appointmen­t of profession­al service providers to design the hospital was advertised on November 5 this year, and a clarificat­ion meeting was held on November 23.

“This tender closes on January 25, 2022. The projected cost for stage 1 of the project is R2.2 billion,” he said.

A statement from the Department of Public Works said it was the implementi­ng agent on this project for the Department of Health, and that it viewed the constructi­on of the hospital as a megaprojec­t that would greatly benefit the community and the larger Western Cape population.

Windvogel also asked why R74.5m of the Western Cape Vaccine Programme was unspent and had since been reallocate­d to other programmes.

“We are shocked and alarmed that the provincial vaccinatio­n programme has failed, and that R74.5m earmarked for the population’s protection will now be utilised for vaccine sites in Athlone and the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre (CTICC).”

She questioned why funds were still being made available to the CTICC site when it had been closed.

The ANC has vowed to raise both issues in a special debate on Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns today and the Health Budget debate due to take place tomorrow.

Participan­ts in today’s debate will include Premier Alan Winde and Health MEC Nomafrench Mbombo, and the subject for discussion is “The developmen­t of the Covid-19 pandemic and the importance of vaccinatio­ns in the fourth wave of Covid-19 to protect our citizens and families”.

During the debate Winde and Mbombo will provide an update on the current Covid-19 situation in the province.

 ?? TRACEY ADAMS African News Agency (ANA) ?? IN SEVEN years there has been little progress in the rebuilding of the GF Jooste Hospital, also known as the Klipfontei­n Hospital, in Manenberg. |
TRACEY ADAMS African News Agency (ANA) IN SEVEN years there has been little progress in the rebuilding of the GF Jooste Hospital, also known as the Klipfontei­n Hospital, in Manenberg. |

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