Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Health corruption should anger us

- WILLIAM SAUNDERSON-MEYER @TheJaundic­edEye Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

THE scale of state corruption in South Africa is so vast that it has become meaningles­s.

Corruption has, in its daily manifestat­ions, lost much of its capacity to shock and outrage.

President Cyril Ramaphosa estimated that state looting during the lost decade of the Jacob Zuma presidency was in the order of R1 trillion. There’s never been any explanatio­n of how the government arrived at that estimate, but it’s a figure that trips daintily off the tongue.

And it expedientl­y side-steps the large-scale corruption that preceded Zuma and was tacitly sanctioned by the ANC. Former president Thabo Mbeki and Cabinet colleagues turned a blind eye to Cabinet ministers pocketing R1 billion in the arms procuremen­t scandal, the start of the impunity culture within government. A billion is not a trillion, but hell, one has to start somewhere.

It’s a statement also calculated to reassure us that under his administra­tion, corruption has ended. When announcing the launch of Covid-19 emergency relief funds last year – drawing on a few billion from South Africa’s resident super-wealthy and a further $4.3bn (about R81bn) from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund – Ramaphosa was unequivoca­l, every cent would be accounted for.

That’s not how it worked out. While there have been no allegation­s of malfeasanc­e at the private-sector run Solidarity Fund, in the state sector Covid-19 has been one long Christmas celebratio­n.

In July last year, the Special Investigat­ing Unit (SIU) was investigat­ing an amount of R2bn of the government’s spending on emergency relief efforts – primarily for the acquisitio­n of personal protective equipment for health workers – as fraudulent.

By September last year, that had more than doubled, with R5bn of the R10.4bn suspected as having been fraudulent­ly spent. This week, the SIU told Parliament that the amount under criminal investigat­ion had increased further, to R14.2bn, out of a Treasury spend of R30.7bn.

If the spending on Covid-19 relief is anything to go by, the looting-to expenditur­e ratio for the Ramaphosa administra­tion, despite all the president’s fine assurances, has been relatively consistent. Out of every R2 spent by the government, about R1 – that we know of – has been stolen.

Arguably, as worrying as the scale of the criminalit­y is the level of impudence. These are not people who fear the police and the courts.

Despite Honest Cyril’s shock and horror over Covid corruption, no one has yet been jailed or even prosecuted.

Take Ramaphosa’s presidenti­al spokespers­on, Khusela Diko. Her hubby scored a corrupt R125m Covid contract, which led to her first being put on “special leave” by Ramaphosa for six months and then suspended.

Diko is reportedly still earning a R1.3 million salary and benefits.

All state looting is terrible, but there should be a special place in hell for those who steal from those working with the sick and dying.

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