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Mahlangu says she’ll testify next year, as Esidimeni deaths rise to 143

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Qedani Mahlangu. Picture: Felix Dlangamandla/FOTO24
Qedani Mahlangu. Picture: Felix Dlangamandla/FOTO24

The number of former Life Esidimeni patients who died during and after the Gauteng mental marathon project has risen to 143.

The patients died after the Gauteng health department moved them from Life Esidimeni and other facilities, to non-governmental organisations that were not equipped to handle them.

Health ombudsman, Professor Malegapuru Makgoba, was asked to review the number of people who died after discrepancies emerged during the arbitration hearings. Earlier during the hearings, the figure was updated to 141 patients who had died and another 59 who were still unaccounted for.

Makgoba’s initial number was 118 patients, but taking into account the number of patients who had died by the end of September, that number had increased to 143.

According to Makgoba’s figures, 29 patients had died at the Cullinan Care and Rehabilitation Centre, Anchor and Siyabadinga, which all share the same premises. Thirty eight patients had died at Mosego and Takalani in Soweto, 20 died at Precious Angels and another 13 at Tshepong. These four facilities accounted for nearly 80% of the patients who died during the transfer of Life Esidimeni patients, according to Makgoba.

“Those were the high density places where people died,” he said.

The legal representatives of former Gauteng MEC for health, Qedani Mahlangu, have told the Life Esidimeni hearings that she would be willing to come testify in January.

The arbitration hearings started more than an hour late today as her legal representatives met with arbitration chair former deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke and the legal representatives for Section27, Legal Aid, Solidarity, the evidence leaders and the State.

Mahlangu’s legal representative told the hearings that Mahlangu would only be available to testify in January when she is expected to finish a module for her masters of business administration at the University of Bedfordshire in the United Kingdom.

Earlier this week, the university said it had suspended Mahlangu over “the severity of the allegations” against her, but her legal representative told the hearings on Friday that it had regarded the suspension as wrongful and unlawful and was planning to challenge it.

Mahlangu’s representatives said she would be available to testify between January 22 and 26. – News24

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