South Africa's health minister put on special leave over graft allegations
Africa
By
Reuters
| Jun 09, 2021
Dr Zweli Mkhize has denied any personal wrongdoing. [Reuters]
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has put his health minister, Zweli Mkhize, on special leave.
This is after allegations that his department irregularly awarded COVID-19-related contracts to a communications company controlled by his former associates arose.
Before Ramaphosa's statement, the minister apologised for the public rage over the allegations.
The latest in a series linked to coronavirus-related tenders that have angered a public suffering pandemic-induced economic hardship.
READ MORE
From Boeing cockpit to truck seat: Building Africa's logistics backbone
France says G7 finance talks 'frank, sometimes difficult'
Africa banks on continental trade agreement to rev up investments
How 300 containers were stolen from Mombasa port
800 youth benefit from 'Glam on Wheels' Initiative
Flower industry loses Sh200m as transport strike hits JKIA cargo
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
Legal battle brews over new tea levy, directorship
For Africa to move forward, Africans must be allowed to cross borders
Global housing crisis deepens despite policy gains - UN warns
Mkhize has denied any personal wrongdoing.
Ramaphosa, who has promised that graft during the COVID-19 pandemic will be dealt with harshly, said the special leave would enable Mkhize to answer an investigation into contacts between his department and service provider Digital Vibes.
Mkhize said: "I fully acknowledge and take personal responsibility for the public outrage that has been caused by this Digital Vibes contract."
"The negative discourse has tainted the teamwork of our government that is led by the president in our continued efforts to fight COVID-19. For all of this I want to unreservedly apologise," he added.
Minister of Tourism Mmamoloko Kubayi-Ngubane will serve as acting minister of health until further notice, Ramaphosa's office said.
The Special Investigating Unit has said a probe it is conducting is nearing completion. The report will be given to Ramaphosa to decide on further action.
In May, Mkhize said a forensic investigation had found that the process of appointing Digital Vibes, headed by his former personal assistant and secretary, was irregular, as was more than 150 million rands ($11 million) paid to the firm.
Daily Maverick, which first broke the news of the contract in February, said the firm was appointed in late 2019 to provide communications services for the government's National Health Insurance roll-out.
The scope of work was extended in March 2020 to include COVID-19-related communication.
($1 = 13.5644 rand)