Sowetan

E Cape spent over R1bn on Covid-19

PPE procuremen­t took largest slice of the cake

- By Staff Reporter

The Eastern Cape provincial government has spent more than a billion rand in the fight against the spread of Covid-19.

Most of the funds were spent on the procuremen­t of personal protective equipment (PPE) and for repairs, renovation­s and refurbishm­ent of health facilities across the province, finance MEC Mlungisi Mvoko said in a statement yesterday. By the end of July, the province had awarded 83 projects to a total value of R582,069,648.25.

A total of 79 contracts were awarded to Eastern Cape-based service providers at a combined value of R525,089,980.85. In total, 611 service providers were appointed, mainly for PPE-related procuremen­t.

By July 22, all 14 provincial department­s and public entities had procured Covid-19 related items to a total of value of R1,199,708,905.01. The province had striven to apply the local economic developmen­t framework, resulting in 497 (73%) of the orders going to Eastern Cape-based suppliers, at a cost of R875,419,146.29.

Mvoko said the department had disclosed the figures in line with finance minister Tito Mboweni’s call for provinces to publish the informatio­n to maintain accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and ethical behaviour. Five provincial department­s had procured Covid-19-related goods and services to a total value of R1,187,846,623, the statement said.

The figure constitute­s 99% of the total value of orders placed by provincial institutio­ns. The department­s are health with a total bill of R628,985,036, education (R545,420,442) transport (R 5,907,275), social developmen­t (R3,878,865) and the Eastern Cape Rural Developmen­t Agency (R3,655,006).

“As we publish all this informatio­n, we do this in the middle of an investigat­ion by provincial treasury [into] all Covid-19 procuremen­t in the province.

“Although it is still early to release informatio­n relating to the actual investigat­ion, we can report that there are preliminar­y findings, but these are engaged with relevant institutio­ns to ascertain certain governance matters, and once comprehens­ively responded to, we will then provide an updated report. Our plan is to start providing reports on the completed investigat­ion starting by the end of August 2020.

“Our investigat­ion will, however, ensure that all transactio­ns triggered by Covid-19 in the province will be reviewed for compliance with prescripts,” Mvoko said.

The top items procured included gowns (to the value of R197,323,727), digital body thermomete­rs (R185,516,761), N95 masks (R141,100,703), sanitisers (R127,804,737), other masks (R108,229,971), disinfecta­nts (R67,401,198), gloves, surgical and examinatio­n.

 ?? / MICHAEL PINYANA ?? Eastern Cape health MEC Sindiswa Gomba, Frere Hospital nursing manager Veliswa Lujiza and premier Oscar Mabuyane on a tour of Frere to show its readiness to assist in fight against Covid19.
/ MICHAEL PINYANA Eastern Cape health MEC Sindiswa Gomba, Frere Hospital nursing manager Veliswa Lujiza and premier Oscar Mabuyane on a tour of Frere to show its readiness to assist in fight against Covid19.

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