Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has dismissed fears that the National Health Insurance scheme could fall prey to state capture, following revelations of massive corruption at Tembisa Hospital. He argues that structural reforms in the NHI will prevent such abuses and that delaying universal healthcare would unfairly punish ordinary South Africans. Motsoaledi emphasized the need to recover lost funds while pushing forward with implementation.
The Special Investigating Unit's probe into Tembisa Hospital, conducted two months ago, uncovered widespread corruption involving three syndicates that looted over R2 billion in public funds through maladministration and procurement fraud. This scandal has heightened concerns about the vulnerability of the proposed National Health Insurance (NHI) to similar capture.
In an interview, Motsoaledi expressed outrage over the Tembisa incidents, stating, “Nobody accepts what happened in Tembisa Hospital. We are actually very angry. That is why between me and [the] SIU we have agreed that we must at least regain at least 90% of the money that was lost as a minimum.” He highlighted flaws in the current system, where provinces serve as both funders and providers, enabling unchecked abuse. “At present, why the system is not working is because, as a province, I am a funder and a provider at the same time. It means I fund what I provide. Whether what I provide is nonsense or not, I still fund it,” he explained.
Under the NHI, this dynamic will shift: provinces will provide services while the NHI fund handles funding. Motsoaledi insisted that governance failures at Tembisa should not halt progress toward universal coverage. “You can’t deprive people of NHI or universal health coverage on the basis that we’ve got scoundrels who steal money or corrupt people. It can’t be fair because you are punishing even innocent people through the actions of others,” he said.
Procurement issues exacerbate risks, with tenders often issued remotely without input from medical professionals, leading to absurd purchases like R500,000 worth of skinny jeans. The NHI will restructure committees to include healthcare experts in decisions, ensuring relevance and oversight.
A recent Institute for Justice and Reconciliation barometer showed 61% of South Africans approve of the NHI. At the ANC's National General Council last week, President Cyril Ramaphosa praised advancements in healthcare, including HIV management, and noted facilities like Baragwanath Hospital and Steve Biko Academic Hospital as NHI-ready.
Since the NHI Act's signing in May 2024, legal challenges have mounted, testing its constitutionality. Motsoaledi affirmed the government's commitment to defending it in court while addressing misconceptions, such as fears that private practice or hospitals would be eliminated.