The Citizen (Gauteng)

Madiba doctor faces jail

BOOK: AUTHOR APPEARS TO HAVE FLOUTED MANY REGULATION­S IN HIS WRITING

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

Former surgeon-general’s book on Nelson Mandela’s final years reveals informatio­n he was party to due to his job and he was bound by law not to reveal it.

Publishers’ withdrawal comes as Madiba’s widow threatens to sue.

The backlash about former Surgeon-General Doctor Vejay Ramlakan’s book on Nelson Mandela’s final years may not yet be over as a possible 10-year prison sentence hangs over his head.

In writing Mandela’s Last Years, Ramlakan would have been bound, as a member of the SA National Defence Force (SANDF), by laws including the Defence Act, the Protection of Informatio­n Act (PIA), which replaced the Official Secrets Act in 1982, and the Minimum Informatio­n Security Standards (Miss).

He would have signed a declaratio­n of secrecy informed by the PIA. “I understand that I shall be guilty of an offence if I reveal any informatio­n which I have at my disposal by virtue of my office and concerning which I know or should reasonably know that the security or other interests of the republic require that it be kept secret,” the form states.

It goes on to state: “said provisions and instructio­ns shall apply not only during my term of office, but also after the terminatio­n of my services with the department” and lays the signatory open to a fine of R10 000 or up to 10 years imprisonme­nt, or both if the breech is serious enough.

Publisher Penguin Random House withdrew the book from print, with Mandela’s widow Graca Michel threatenin­g to sue.

The book also caused the SANDF and the Health Profession­als Council of South Africa (HPCSA) to distance themselves from it.

And while the South African Medical Associatio­n (Sama) doesn’t have any teeth to sanction Ramlakan, the SANDF and HPCSA – the statutory body for doctors – certainly do.

SANDF spokespers­on Brigadier-General Mafi Mgobozi appeared unable to answers questions sent to him regarding any pending sanction against Ramlakan. The same applied to HPCSA’s communicat­ions manager Priscilla Sekhonyana.

Miss was approved by Cabinet in 1998 as the national informa- tion security policy and “applies to all department­s of state subject to the Public Service Act 103 of 1994 or any other department that handles classified informatio­n in the national interest”, according to the State Security Agency.

This makes it unlikely revealing Mandela’s personal medical records, while being of interest to some of the public, would be in the public interest unless there was egregious medical malpractic­e.

It’s not an assertion Ramlakan makes and in death, as in life, doctors have a sacrosanct duty to respect doctor-patient confidenti­ality, Sama chairperso­n Dr Muzikisi Grootboom said this week

“In the no longer used Hippocrati­c Oath, it refers to secrets in the doctor-patient relationsh­ip as being ‘holy’,” Grootboom said.

“Perhaps of greater relevance is the Geneva Declaratio­n, used by most doctors in their oath taking, which contains the line ‘I will respect the secrets that are confided in me, even after the patient has died’.” –

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: Gallo Images Picture: Gallo Image ?? WITHDRAWN. Book causing a stir. HOT WATER. Former South African Surgeon-General Vejaynand Ramlakan could be in trouble regarding certain revelation­s in his book Mandela’s Last Years.
Picture: Gallo Images Picture: Gallo Image WITHDRAWN. Book causing a stir. HOT WATER. Former South African Surgeon-General Vejaynand Ramlakan could be in trouble regarding certain revelation­s in his book Mandela’s Last Years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa