The Citizen (KZN)

Cops hunt for PPE dumpers

- Brian Sokutu

Police are casting their net wide in search of the culprits behind the bizarre dumping of a truckload of Covid-19 personal protective equipment (PPE) along the Hannops River in Centurion at the weekend.

While avoiding giving details of progress made in the investigat­ion of the unpreceden­ted disposal of unused PPE, police spokespers­on Brigadier Mathapelo Peters, yesterday assured the public that no stone would be left unturned to bring those responsibl­e to book.

“The intention of the investigat­ion, led by police at Lyttleton [SA Police Service], is to trace the origin of the Covid-19 PPE consignmen­t strewn in the Hennops River at the Irene Golf Estate and establish the circumstan­ces surroundin­g this incident.

“There have been no previous incidents of this nature to have been reported to the police.”

The broadening of the investigat­ion could see police also interviewi­ng PPE supplying companies Promed Technologi­es, Medtex and Nitrile, whose names were clearly marked on the disposed consignmen­t.

Democratic Alliance Tshwane councillor Bronwyn Engelbrech­t, who has maintained that behind the incident was “the hiding of incriminat­ing evidence”, said the forensic investigat­ion would be made easier with the names of companies labelled on the boxes found.

The resurgence of PPE graft has seen President Cyril Ramaphosa coming under pressure from the ANC’s alliance partners, the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the SA Communist Party, who have called for a firmer hand in dealing with corruption.

The PPE disposal scandal takes place against a background of politicall­y connected individual­s implicated in questionab­le multimilli­on-rand PPE government tenders.

Those implicated include Presidency spokespers­on Khusela Diko, her husband, chief Madzikane II Thandisizw­e, Gauteng health MEC Bandile Masuku and his wife Loyiso.

KwaZulu-Natal-based Promed Technologi­es is described in its website as having been involved “in the distributi­on of medical and surgical consumable­s since 2014”.

With products ranging from latex to nitrile, Promed supplies sanitation, surgical and medical equipment.

The intention of the investigat­ion is to trace the origin of the Covid-19 PPE consignmen­t.

Brigadier Mathapelo Peters

Police spokespers­on

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