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21 September 2020 - NW1983

Profile picture: Abrahams, Ms ALA

Abrahams, Ms ALA to ask the Minister of Social Development

With reference to her reply to question 829 on 11 June 2020, and the indication by the SA Social Security Agency (SASSA) in a Portfolio Committee on Social Development on 13 May 2020 that it was in the process of restructuring its operating model, which will likely include a reduction in the number of SASSA’s regional offices, what (a) is the current organogram of SASSA which includes (i) regional, (ii) provincial and (iii) district offices, (b) are the full names and titles of the current managers at each specified office, (c) are the reporting lines for the managers in the offices and (d) is the physical addresses of the regional, provincial and district offices?

Reply:

(a)(b)and (c)

In line with the reply provided in Question 829, SASSA’s proposed operating model has not been implemented. However, the three existing Regional Executive Managers have been seconded on a temporary basis to manage additional Regions each for a period of six months. The secondments are in line with the Staffing Practices Policy of SASSA.

The full names and titles of the current managers at each specified office, and (c) the reporting lines for the managers in the offices are listed on the attached list (Annexures A1-A10)

The current Organisational Structure as approved by the Minister of Social Development comprises of Head Office (Pretoria) and nine (9) Regional Offices.The Agency’s organogram caters for 9 Regional (Provincial) Executive Managers that report directly to the Chief Executive Officer (CEO)of SASSA (i.e., 1 Regional Executive Manager for each province). For ease of reference, the Organisational structure is attached below.

In each province/region there are a number of District Managers that are appointed and they report to the Regional Executive of the province/region. The diagram below depicts the high-level structure as approved which includes 9 provincial/regional offices. Attached are organograms demonstrating reporting lines of all the regional,provincial and districts offices, including reporting lines for managers.

Vacant posts;

  • Ms Dunkerley is managing functions of Grants operations and Policy implementation
  • Vacant Regional Executive Managers posts (6) have the 3 Regional Managers seconded as incumbents acting in clusters positions
  • GM Office of the CEO position is vacant, but has been advertised.
  • The position of COO is identified as a key and critical position,and funded, but currently vacant.

d) Physical Addresses Regional, Provincial and District Offices, please refer to (Annexure B)

National Assembly Written Reply: 1983 of 2020

_______________________

Approved by the Minister of Social Development

Date……………………….

21 September 2020 - NW2156

Profile picture: Waters, Mr M

Waters, Mr M to ask the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition

Whether, with reference to his reply to question 737 on 25 May 2020, he received the information requested from the provinces; if not, by what date does he envisage to receive such information; if so, will he furnish Mr. M Waters with the further relevant details? [

Reply:

Following my reply to PQ 737, I requested the Department to contact the provincial regulators and ask for information to advise on further steps that national government may need to take.

Information was received from the Eastern Cape, Gauteng, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, North West, KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape provinces. I am advised that no information was received as yet from the Free State and Northern Cape.

The provincial liquor regulators form part of the National Liquor Regulators Forum (NLRF), which also consist of the South African Police Services (SAPS). SAPS indicated that in order to address liquor abuse as a contributor to contact crime as well as serious violent crimes, the National Crime Combatting Forum (NCCF) Instruction 2 of 2019 was issued to address the policing of the legal and illegal liquor trade from 01 April 2019 to 31 March 2020.

All provinces were instructed to plan and execute joint liquor control operations to ensure compliance by liquor traders with the provisions of national and provincial liquor legislation, focusing specifically on licensed liquor premises and illegal liquor outlets in close proximity of schools. This focused operational approach ensured the termination of illegal liquor trade at 2 279 unlicensed liquor outlets which were located in close proximity of schools.

With the country now at Level 1 and with the return of full government functions, further steps will be taken to request the outstanding information from the two provinces. The replies from provinces will form the basis for consideration by national government and where challenges were identified (e.g. the need for a clear and empowering legislative framework to enable provinces to take additional action), this is currently under consideration. On completion of these processes, a report will be prepared.

-END-

18 September 2020 - NW2013

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Mabhena, Mr TB to ask the Minister of Transport

Whether the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa is currently engaged in any process of insourcing security personnel; if so, what is the total number of (a) security personnel to be insourced and (b) the existing security personnel that will be insourced?

Reply:

a) The number of security officers to be insourced are 3100; and

b) The existing number of insourced security officials are 2420.

18 September 2020 - NW2085

Profile picture: Hlengwa, Ms MD

Hlengwa, Ms MD to ask the Minister in The Presidency for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities

Whether, given that not much has changed between this year and the last in terms of the gender-based violence (GBV) cases reported in the Republic, her Office has taken any additional steps at monitoring incidents of GBV in order to protect the most vulnerable members of society, which is also aimed to yield different results; if not, why not; if so, what are the full relevant details?

Reply:

Gender-based violence (GBV) is a social ill which continues to plaque South Africa and Government and civil society have to remain committed to making our country safe for women across ages, gender and sexual identities, disability and geographic location. Cases of GBV are reported to service delivery departments such as the South African Police Service (SAPS) and the Department of Social Development.

In March 2020 Cabinet approved the National Strategic Plan on Gender-based Violence (NSPGBVF) and the Minister in the Presidency for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities was tasked to Chair an Inter-Ministerial Committee (IMC) on the implementation of the NSP on GBVF and the National Council for GBVF (NCGBVF). Further, the IMC also include the Ministers of Justice and Correctional Services, Police, Pubic Service and Administration Social Development and Finance.

The IMC is responsible for providing leadership, enforcing and coordinating all efforts towards the implementation of NSPGBVF by all government departments. The Departments of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities and Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation have put in place a Monitoring and Evaluation Plan which ensures that weekly reports on GBVF are provided to the President.

Through the Emergency Response Action Plan (ERAPP) that was launched by the President towards the end of 2019, the number of shelters and care centres for GBV survivors were increased, the capacity of the police to deal with crimes of sexual violence as well as services to women who have to go through the criminal justice system were improved. All efforts are contributing in protecting the most vulnerable members of our society.

Since May 2020 the IMC have started implementing the NSPGBVF and all government departments will be accountable to Parliament on implementing the NSPGBVF.

18 September 2020 - NW1065

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Sithole, Mr KP to ask the Minister of Transport

Whether his department has taken into account that due to more movement under alert level 3 and the increased number of commuters who will be using the extremely limited public transport system, the percentage limits on buses and taxis remain the same and yet only one train line has been opened in each area with Metrorail; if so, has (a) he found that the percentage limits and limited train lines will meet the transport needs of commuters and (b) the cost discrepancy between taking the subsidised bus and/or train versus the unsubsidised taxis been considered, especially since the poorest members of the public make up the bulk of commuters?

Reply:

a) In Alert level 3 taxis and buses were allowed to carry 100% of their licensed capacity, there were no limitations.

PRASA resumed its Metrorail Operation on 01 July 2020, in all Regions (Western Cape, Eastern Cape, KwaZulu Natal and Gauteng) in line with the level 3 lockdown regulations, governed by the risk adjustment strategy implemented by the Government in an attempt to limit the spread of Corona virus pandemic. The Metrorail services resumed in the following corridors at 30% capacity in line with the regulations:

Western Cape: Cape Town - Retreat (Wynberg)

KwaZulu-Natal: Durban – Umlazi, Durban - Kwamashu

Gauteng Pienaarspoort - Pretoria

Eastern Cape Port Elizabeth –Uitenhage and East London - Berlin

In response to the increase in public transport demand the loading capacity of Metrorail has been increased from 50% to 70% on 22 July 2020.The provision of Metrorail services has, however, been constraint due to the high level of vandalism and theft of rail infrastructure and assets.

Metrorail services will gradually resume in line with the PRASA adopted infrastructure and security plan and in compliance with COVID-19 Directions. The focus will be on corridors with high passenger demand and with less repair work required on vandalised infrastructure and station facilities.

17 September 2020 - NW1457

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Sukers, Ms ME to ask the Minister of Social Development

(1)(a) What is the breakdown of the costs incurred by her department in theDemocratic Alliance court case and that of1000 Women Trust that was decided on 22 May 2020 in the Cape High Court over the enforced ban on soup kitchens and food distribution regulations and (b) how will these costs impact on her department; (2) whether the legal action could have been avoided through the less expensive and more fruitful course of consultation with the litigating parties; if not, why not; if so, (a) was the course of consultation with the litigating parties pursued and (b) what are the relevant details?

Reply:

1. (a) The Department has not yet been invoiced for the applicant’s costs.

(b) The impact on the department will be that the legal costs are not budgeted for.

(2)  (a) No;

(b) The applicants launched an urgent court application based on internal document which were still being consulted. The department did engage the applicants but did not agree on the material facts. The applicants wanted to prevent the Minister from issuing directions of which she is empowered by the Constitution and by the relevant Disaster Management Act. The court had to pronounce on these fundamental issues and ordered that theMinister is entitled to issue directions in this regard and further that the applicants be afforded an opportunity to look at the final draft directions three days before gazetting.

17 September 2020 - NW2007

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Van Damme, Ms PT to ask the Minister of Communications

(1)What are the relevant details of each official credit card issued to any staff member employed by any entity reporting to her; (2) in respect of each specified credit card, (a) what is the (i) name and (ii) organogram position of the user, (iii) maximum permissible value of each purchase and (iv) total credit limit of the card and (b) what are the (i) relevant details of permissible purchases for which each credit card may be used and (ii) reasons that each specified person was issued with a credit card? NW2568E

Reply:

I have been advised by the SOEs as follows:

1.

Entity

Details of official credit card issued

zaDNA

The official credit card issued to Mr Peter Madavhu in his capacity as Acting CEO

SAPO

No official credit card issued to any employee

Postbank

No official credit card issued to any employee

Nemisa

No official credit card issued to any employee

USAASA

No official credit card issued to employees

FPB

No official credit card issued to any employee

BBI

No official credit card issued to any employee

SITA

No official credit card issued to any employee

ICASA

No official credit card issued to any employee

SABC

No official credit card issued to any employee

Sentech

No official credit card issued to any employee

2. (a)

Entity

(i)Name

(ii)Organogram

(iii)

(iv)

zaDNA

Mr Peter Madavhu

Acting CEO

Never used

R200 000

USAASA

Not applicable

     

Nemisa

Not applicable

     

BBI

Not applicable

     

SABC

Not applicable

     

ICASA

Not applicable

     

Postbank

Not Applicable

     

FPB

Not Applicable

     

Sentech

Not applicable

     

SITA

Not applicable

     

SAPO

Not applicable

     

(b) (i) (ii) zaDNA indicated that the official credit card was never utilised by Mr Madavhu who was the Acting CEO. This section of the Parliamentary Question is not applicable to other entities based on their response to number 1.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1327

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King, Ms C to ask the Minister of Social Development

What is her department’s involvement in the National Food and Nutrition Security Co-ordinating Committee?

Reply:

The Department is part of the National Food and Nutrition Security Co-ordinating Committee and is a lead department working on the Strategic Objective 3 together with the Department of Basic Education, Health; Home Affairs; Provinces and local government; Civil Society; Development Partners.

Strategic Objective 3

NFNSP Strategic Objective

Rationale

Strategic Objective 3. Expand targeted social protection measures and sustainable livelihood programmes

  • Social protection and sustainable livelihoods are essential for access to safe and nutritious food safe water, sanitation and health care.

 

Working with the Department of Health infants born in public & private health facilities are registered within 30 days in population register. This is intended to ensure that eligible children receive the Child Support Grant on time.

DSD amongst other things responsible to improve the child grant registration system. This is intended to ensure that eligible children are registered for Child Support Grant.

DSD is also developing an integrated social protection information system to improve access to social assistance programmes.

Under strategic objective 3, we also expandingthe network of feeding and food distribution centres. This include the National School Nutrition Programme implemented by Department of Basic Education, children (0-4 years) provided with food through ECDs and DSD centre based nutrition programmes.

 

17 September 2020 - NW1959

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Chirwa, Ms NN to ask the Minister of Health

(a) By what date does his department intend to build the gateway clinic that the George Mukhari Hospital management requested his department to build in order to take care of the health needs of the community and lessen the burden on the hospital and (b) what plans are put in place to ease the pressure on the George Mukhari Hospital?

Reply:

a) The estimated time-frame for the completion of the project is 6-8 months including the planning, budget allocation, approval of drawings, submission and approval of site development plans to the City of Tshwane.

b) The Project Initiation report (PIR) was submitted to the end-user for approval in early 2020 with several subsequent revisions. The plan at this time includes an Onsite birthing unit, short stay ward and 24-hour clinic with a Radiology unit. Currently the final PIR is drafted following meetings held with the end-users and some concept drawings that were provided to the end-user for approval. The final draft of the PIR was submitted to the end-user for approval on the 10th September 2020. The planned unit will be a modular Alternative Built Technology structure. The budget allocation will only be approved once the PIR is approved by the HOD.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW1968

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Hendricks, Mr MGE to ask the Minister of Health

Whether, in light of the concerns he raised on the harmful effects of alcohol, he will consider moving for an alcohol tax to fund the impact of alcohol on the budget of his department; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, can such funds be used to build treatment centres, especially for use over weekends?

Reply:

The proposal of using taxes from alcohol to fund healthcare services is referring to as earmarking. The earmarking is usually legislated and would usually lead to all or a portion of the funds being used to finance healthcare services in general or a specific aspect of healthcare, e.g messaging on the harmful effects of alcohol. This legislative mandate lies with the Minister of Finance.

Historically the National Department of Health has raised the earmarking of sin taxes (alcohol, tobacco, sugar) as an option with the National Treasury. The National Treasury has been reluctant to accept the earmarking proposal citing the following reasons:

  • It introduces rigidities in the budgetary process, limiting availability of funds for alternative and (sometimes) more urgent purposes;
  • Can lead to waste of resources when not carefully planned by recipient institution/ programme;
  • When tax revenue collection is low then the dependent programme will be negatively affected;
  • This may result in fragmentation of pooling and similar demands from other sectors;
  • Will eventually shrink as consumption of harmful/unhealthy products declines.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW1975

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Arries, Ms LH to ask the Minister of Health

Given that in Pacaltsdorp in George in the Western Cape there is only one clinic that must serve four wards, how does he intend to ensure that everyone in the specified area will have access to good and proper medical care?

Reply:

Pacaltsdorp Clinic is centrally located in Pacaltsdorp and provides a comprehensive service to a community of about 23 000 people.

Plans are afoot to upgrade the facility through the NHI project funded by the National Department of Health. In the proposed new clinic, the following upgrading will be included: eleven (11) consultation rooms, a pharmacy with a chronic dispensing unit, an emergency room and a multi-purpose room for meetings. These will all form part of the project. It is envisaged that the upgrades to the facility will extend infrastructure capacity to continue providing quality comprehensive primary health services to the community.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW2025

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Ismail, Ms H to ask the Minister of Health

(1)What (a) are the reasons for performing Covid-19 tests on corpses and (b)(i) are the full details and (ii) is the total number of Covid-19 tests that were performed on corpses; (2) whether he has found this practice to be a waste of resources; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, what are the relevant details?

Reply:

(1) (a)-(b) (i) The testing of deceased persons applies only to persons that have died of natural causes outside of a health facility where their COVID status is not known. The reason for performing this test is to protect the close contacts of the deceased should the person have been positive then the close contacts may be infected. Secondly our death statistics for COVID do not include persons that had died of COVID outside of a health facility since nobody was aware if they were infected with COVID. This data will allow us to include deaths of persons outside of health facilities that are COVID positive.

(b) (ii) The NHLS informs us that there were 86 tests performed on deceased persons to date, of which 13 tests were positive.

(2) The practice cannot be considered to be a waste of resources given that testing a deceased person for COVID-19 would assist in halting the spread of the infection from their contacts to others.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW2030

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Ismail, Ms H to ask the Minister of Health

In view of many recent reports of family members burying the wrong body instead of their loved ones, what (a) measures are put in place to ensure that undertakers do not mix up dead bodies as strain on the sector increases with the steep rise in Covid-19 deaths and (b) security measures are placed at the mortuaries to ensure the safety of bodies?

Reply:

a) The Department has made provision in the Health Directions published on the 17 July 2020, paragraph 9(5) which states that: “once in the hospital or private mortuary, the body bag may be opened for family members (one at a time) to view the human remains”. This provision allows family members to view their loved ones and the current standard of labelling human remains still applies and there should not be challenges if everyone plays their roles. The normal practice of viewing human remains at home out of the mortuary is considered high risk and therefore prohibited to protect the funeral attendees.

b) All funeral undetakers are required to have a certificate of competence in order to operate. This certificate ensures that mortuary premises meet the minimum standards provided in the regulations. Government cannot provide security services to these facilities as they are privately operated but owners can provide such security services. Government mortuaries are within health facilities and most of these facilites have access control.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW2056

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Ndlozi, Dr MQ to ask the Minister of Health

Whether there is Covid-19 testing in mortuaries for deaths by natural causes not determined in other facilities such as hospitals; if so, what number of Covid-19-related deaths have been determined at the mortuaries, besides the number of deaths that were already confirmed to be related to Covid-19?

Reply:

COVID-19 testing of the deceased persons is not conducted in mortuaries, however, specimen collection is done at mortuaries according to the Guidelines for COVID-19 Postmortem Testing. The specimens for COVID-19 Postmortem Testing are transported to the National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) for testing.

The testing of the deceased persons applies only to persons that have died of natural causes outside of a health facility where their COVID status is not known. The reason for performing this test is to protect the close contacts of the deceased should the person have been positive then the close contacts may be infected. Secondly our death statistics for COVID do not include persons that had died of COVID outside of a health facility since nobody was aware if they were infected with COVID or not. This data will allow us to include deaths of persons outside of health facilities that are COVID positive.

According to the data from the NHLS there were 75 COVID-19 tests performed on deceased persons to date, of which 12 tests were positive.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW1976

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Motsepe, Ms CCS to ask the Minister of Health

What (a) number of doctors in the Public Service are unable to perform their duties, because they are either over the age of 60 or have underlying illnesses that make them vulnerable to Covid-19 and (b) steps has he taken to replace them?

Reply:

(a) The total number of Medical Doctors in the Public Health Sector, reported by the Provincial Departments of Health as being over the age of 60 is 810, and the number of doctors that are over the age of 60 and/or have underlying illnesses that make them vulnerable to Covid-19 is 250;

(b) The table outlines the steps taken by Provinces in each affected District/Regions to replace them:

 

EASTERN CAPE

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

Alfred Ndzo

2

During this Covid-19 pandemic period the Province appointed an additional 81 (on either permanent or short term contract) medical doctors to strengthen services during Surge.

 

Joe Gqabi:

2

 

Dora Nginza Regional Hospital:

1

 

TOTAL

5

 

FREE STATE

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

 Free State Province

0

Not applicable

 

Total

0

 

GAUTENG

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

Gauteng Province

102

During this Covid-19 pandemic period the Province appointed an additional 473 (on either permanent or short term contract) medical doctors to strengthen services during Surge.

Total

102

 

KWAZULU NATAL

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

 KwaZulu Natal

0

Not applicable

 

Total

0

 

LIMPOPO

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

 Limpopo

0

Not applicable

 

Total

0

 

MPUMALANGA

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

Mpumalanga Province

0

Not applicable

 

Total

0

 

NORTH WEST

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

NgakaModiriMolema

3

During this Covid-19 pandemic period the Province appointed an additional 128 (on either permanent or short term contract) medical doctors to strengthen services during Surge.                        

 

Bojanala

17

 

Dr KK

1

 

Dr RSM

0

 

Total

21

 

NORTHERN CAPE

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

PixleyKaSeme District

1

During this Covid-19 pandemic period the Province appointed an additional 166 (on either permanent or short term contract) medical doctors to strengthen services during Surge.                        

 

Total

1

 

WESTERN CAPE

Institution/District/Region

Total number of doctors recorded

Steps taken to replace them:

GENSES and EMS

6

During this Covid-19 pandemic period the Province appointed an additional 82 (on either permanent or short term contract) medical doctors to strengthen services during Surge.                        

 

GSH

20

 

Metro

29

 

Rural

29

 

RXH

14

 

Tygerberg Hospital

23

 

Total

121

 

END.

17 September 2020 - NW2027

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Ismail, Ms H to ask the Minister of Health

(1)With reference to reports that hospitals in North West do not have adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) to handle deceased persons, what quantity of PPEs have been provided to North West hospitals; (2) what are the details of the breakdown of the supply of PPEs that were delivered to each public health facility in the North West?

Reply:

1. Provincial Departments of Health must order PPEs from suppliers listed on the Central Supplier Database in accordance with National Treasury guidelines on specifications and price. The National Department of Health does not order or pay for the PPEs ordered.

The information on link below was extracted from the provincial stock visibility system from the North West Province. The table includes the quantities of the various PPEs by facility as at 11 September 2020.

https://pmg.org.za/files/RNW2027Table.pdf

END.

17 September 2020 - NW1965

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Van Staden, Mr PA to ask the Minister of Health

(1)From which (a) countries and/or (b) organisations did the Republic receive relief for Covid-19, including donations of medical equipment and personal protective equipment and materials; (2) (a) what was the extent of such donations in terms of items and quantities in each case and (b)(i) where were the specified items deployed and (ii) in what quantities; (3) whether any assistance was rendered to other countries in the fight against the Covid-19 pandemic; if not, why not; if so, what (a) was the extent of the assistance and (b) are the relevant details in each case; (4) whether any of the material received as foreign aid was diverted to other countries in the form of assistance; if so, (a) why and (b) what are the relevant details in each case; (5) whether he will make a statement on the matter?

Reply:

  1. (a) List of Countries from which donations were received
  • Peoples Republic of China
  • Germany
  • Denmark
  • United Arab Emirates
  • Republic of Korea
  • United States of America
  • Turkey
  • France

(b) List of organisations from whom donations were received

  • The African Union
  • Naspers
  • First National Bank
  • United Pharmaceutical Distributers
  • Gift of the Givers
  • European Union
  • World Health Organization (WHO)
  • Ford Motor Company
  • Solidarity Fund
  • S A Society of Anaesthesiology
  • Motsepe Foundation
  • Jack Ma Foundation
  • Bank of Republic of China
  • Province of Hannan
  • Hikvision (Pty) Ltd S A
  • Right to Care (CHW Programme)
  • AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals (Pty) Ltd
  • The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Days
  • Old Mutual
  • Luke International
  • Syntech Love Technology
  • Huawei
  • UVEX Safety SA (PTY) LTD
  • Frasers
  • Phillips
  • KFW
  • Global Energy Interconnection Dev & Co-op
  • The Foundation for Professional Development (funded by KFW German Development Bank)
  • Individual donors

(2) (a)-(b) The link table belows reflect the details in this regard.

https://pmg.org.za/files/RNW1965Table.pdf

(3) Yes, the National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) donated nasopharyngeal swabs and viral transport media to Namibia

a) extent of the donation

b) details of the donation

5 000

Nasopharyngeal swabs

2 000

Viral transport media

(4) No, no material received was diverted to other countries as foreign aid.

a) Not applicable

bb) Not applicable

(5) We do make statements when receiving donations and we will continue doing so as and when required.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW1904

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Gwarube, Ms S to ask the Minister of Health

(1)What are the details of the (a) number of contracts that (i) his department and (ii) each entity reporting to him awarded for the provision of goods and services in each province since 1 March 2020, (b) name of each company that received a contract in each case, (c) goods and services contracted from each company in each case, (d) cost of each contract in each case and (e) names of the directors sitting on the boards of each company; (2) whether each of the specified companies delivered and/or performed the contracted goods and/or services; if not, in each case, (a) why not and (b) what are the further relevant details; if so, (3) whether each of the specified companies delivered and/or performed the contracted goods and/or services by the contracted date of delivery; if not, in each case, (a) why not and (b) what are the further relevant details; (4) whether any of the specified companies received contracts from his department, any entity reporting to him or any other Government department or entity in each of the past five financial years; if so, what are the full relevant details in each case?

Reply:

See the reply here: https://pmg.org.za/files/RNW1904-200917REPLY.pdf

1. (a) (i) National Department of Health:

No

(1)(b) Name of each company

(1)(c) goods and services contracted

(1)(d) cost of each contract

(1)(e) Name of Directors

2(a)(b) Goods Delivered

(3)(a)(b) Goods Delivered by contracted Date

(4) Contract awarded in the last five years

             

Yes/No

If Yes, Details

NATIONAL DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

(1)(a)(i) Total number ofContract awarded =

 

XON Systems

300 PC’s (Northern Cape)

R5 233 650.00

  1. Jan Carel Coetzee
  1. Van Buynder
  1. Israel Biziwe Skosana
  1. Daphne Ramaisela Motsepe
  1. Mark John Harris
  1. Gibraltar Trust
  1. Terabyte Share Trust
  1. NEC Europe
  1. Kapela ICT (Pty) Ltd

Yes

Yes

   
 

Ezevee Computer Solutions

200 PC’s (Mpumalanga)

R3 491 827.80

  1. Ezekiel Kgapola

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

N/A

   
 

Madiko Technologies

1655 PC’s (Eastern Cape)

R28 308 940.50

  1. Riaan Levern Rai

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Neotech IT Solutions

228 Label Printers

228 Scanners (Eastern Cape)

R4 638 318.00

  1. Tapologo Kingsley

YES

YES

   
 

Inyentseka IT Solutions

81100 Labels

158300 Ribbon (Gauteng)

R9 855 401.00

  1. Miranda Khanya Mahlangu
  1. Jabulani Phahlane

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

A Solutions

256 Label Printers

256 2D Scanners (Free State)

R5 139 614.60

  1. Frank Douglas Beckett
  1. Estie Du Preez
  1. Ocean Trust
  1. Stepcor Trust

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Ndiza Information Systems

201 Label Printers

201 Barcode Scanners (KwaZulu-Natal)

R4 057 375.95

  1. Qiniso Mazubane

Yes

Yes

   
 

Yellow Technical Services

5 Fixed Thermal Scanner machines

91 Handheld devices

91 Extra batteries

91 Charging batteries (Port of Entry)

R10 521 141.65

  1. Jacobus Johannes Botes
  1. Tjaart Broodryk
  1. Antonio Joaqum Moreira De Sousa
  1. Moba April Seshoka

No

No

   
 

Xeketse Office Supplies

364 Printers

364 Scanners (Eastern Cape)

R7 307 839.27

  1. Lulama Chauke

Yes

Yes

   
 

Batsha IT Solutions

7000 Label Printers (Gauteng)

R8 593 593.50

  1. Digatlo Sylvia Madisha

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Ecomm Technologies

590 Zebra Printers (KwaZulu-Natal)

R2 910 866.50

  1. Kistensamy Chetty

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Mosima IT Solutions

60 Printers

60 Scanners (Northern Cape)

R1 286 391.15

  1. Victor Motaung

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Batsha IT Solutions

431 Scanners (Gauteng)

R544 223.70

  1. Digatlo Sylvia Madisha

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Endeva Technologies

143 Scanners (Limpopo)

R3 095 113.45

  1. Nyasha Manhando

Yes

Yes

   
 

Protea Raunch Hotel

Quarantine facilities for the support team and South African citizens that were repatriated from China

R11 256 000.00

  1. Thomas Charles Shearer
  1. Gertruida Jacoba Elizabeth Gunter
  1. Paul William Shearer

Yes

Yes

   
 

Fourth Door Holding

A public drive awareness campaign using multiple communication platform

R1 447 074.90

  1. Talent Nombuso Nxumalo
  1. Itumeleng Gabriel Seemola

Yes

Yes

   
 

Equal Edge Trading

A public drive awareness campaign using multiple communication platform (Community Radios)

R3 600 000.00

  1. Tokologo Phetla

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Intelligent Medical Systems

National Covid-19 Surveillance and Case Management System

R18 193 920.00

  1. Darryl Garth Vine

Yes

Yes

   
 

Dr T.P. Neluheni Tshinaba

Technical Advisor to support the National Department of Health with various Covid-19 Activities for 2 months

R3 995.00 hourly rate

  1. Dr T.P Neluheni Tshinaba

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Boulo Properties

Fogging and virus treatment at Civitas Building

R565 004.48

  1. Charlotte Mamelo Selemela

Yes

Yes

   
 

Ernst and Young

Continuation of Project Management office support

R14 671 755.00

  1. Daniel Bartholomeus De Leeuw
  1. Donovan Steve Van Straaten
  1. Natasha Meintjies
  1. Dharmalingum Moodley
  1. Daryl Elizabeth Blakeway
  1. Jean Robert Mettler
  1. Vedika Andhee
  1. Xolile Ncame
  1. Khethiwe Cebekulu
  1. Leon Oosthuizen
  1. Gisela Pieterse
  1. Ajen Sita
  1. Valerie Anne Davies
  1. James Thomas Carlyon Luke
  1. Trevor Wayne Rorbye
  1. Russel Mark Smith
  1. Warren Bryan Taylor
  1. Corlie Hazell
  1. Brigitte France Keirby-Smith
  1. Paul Abel Nel
  1. Rendani Mabel Neluvhalani
  1. Susanna Elisabeth Breytenbach
  1. Maria Magdalena Pretorius
  1. Marius Van Den Berg
  1. Martin Armin Walbeck
  1. Roderick George Wolfenden
  1. Hendrik Gerhardus Coenraad Human
  1. Wendy Gardner
  1. Anil Khimjee
  1. Sharon Van Rooyen
  1. Grant Andrew Brewer
  1. Darmesh Narsih Naka
  1. Derek Engelbrecht
  1. Lisa Jane Jonker
  1. Mark Campbell Goulding
  1. Ashwin Gandabhai Goolab
  1. Johannes Jacobus Gen Van Pittius
  1. Legohu Stephen Ntsoane
  1. Quintin Peter Hobbs
  1. Vincenzo Francesco Paino
  1. Malcom Peter Rapson
  1. Izak Daniel Petrus Louw
  1. Johannes Nicolaas Boshoff
  1. Caleb Tsiabe Motsamai
  1. Jane Margaret Fitton
  1. Clifford James Sacks
  1. Cynthia Jabulile Kubheka
  1. Bradley John Scott-King
  1. Franca Cinzia Amata De Risi
  1. Lance Ian Tomlinson
  1. Vijayan Rathna Sean Pather
  1. Chad Schaffer
  1. Mark Biggs
  1. Nomakwezi Nomncedisi Gloria Yekani-Peni
  1. Michelle Anne Moonsammy
  1. Eduard Stephenson
  1. Sarel Jacobus Johannes Strydom
  1. Mangaliso Nzimande
  1. Avendth Royithlal Tilakdari
  1. Garth Pretorius
  1. Johannes Barend Greyling
  1. Sandile Emmanuel Mangaliso Hlope
  1. Hayley Claire Haupt
  1. Benita Van Der Vyver
  1. Alastair Herman Jacobs
  1. Kavishin Pather
  1. Michel Christiaan Els
  1. Vibhuti Lalloo
  1. Abhishek Kapur
  1. Bathobakae Makhakhe
  1. Jaco Louw
  1. Nelisiwe Shiluvana
  1. Xolani Khayelihle Dludla
  1. Lionel Pillay
  1. Neil Maree
  1. Bathabile Prudence Ponu
  1. Brian Paul Lewkowicz
  1. Michelle Kotze
  1. Matthew Hedley Walker
  1. Paul Daniels
  1. Reginald Desmond De Swardt
  1. Helen Etzebeth
  1. Graham Mark Jeffrey
  1. Lebogang Brian Jantjies
  1. Khatija Khan
  1. Sofia Moola
  1. Deepak Khoosal
  1. Carl Nicholas Kuhlenthal
  1. Mohammed Younus Jada
  1. Tasneem Karriem
  1. Cornelia Johanna De Villiers
  1. Brunhilde Barnard
  1. Lindie Engelbrecht
  1. Azim Omar
  1. Heather Tracy De Jongh
  1. Pieter Jacobus Grove
  1. Rachel Lynne Bateman
  1. Stefanus Beyers Botha
  1. Alwina Brand
  1. Candice Leigh Van Der Berg
  1. Emile Francois Du Toit
  1. Abdur-Rahman Cader
  1. Stephen Entienne Ethelbert Ward
  1. Sugandran Dhanaseelan Palanee
  1. Sajag Arora
  1. Larissa Clark
  1. David Edward Woolnough
  1. Nkululeko Praise-God Oliphant
  1. Abraham Ekow Eghan

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

   
 

Sekela Xabisa

Provision of Forensic Audit

R592 250.00

  1. Dhlamini Lindani Lorna
  1. Mokgalagadi Pulafela Raymond
  1. Dlamini Zolile Abel
  1. Ramantsi Tlamelo Joshua

Tender was approved but Order not yet issued

SLA stage

   

(ii) Council for Medical Schemes

No

(1)(b) Name of each company

(1)(c) goods and services contracted

(1)(d) cost of each contract

(1)(e) Name of Directors

2(a)(b) Goods Delivered

(3)(a)(b) Goods Delivered by contracted Date

(4) Contract awarded in the last five years

             

Yes/No

If Yes, Details

COUNCIL MEDICAL SCHEMES

(1)(a)(ii) Total number ofContract awarded = 5

1

Careways Wellness (Pty) Ltd

Appointment of a service provider for Wellness Programme for a period of three (3) years

R 170 125.16

Mahomed Salim

Motala

Palesa

Moletsane

Life Occupational Health

Work in Progress (April 2020-March 2023)- Service is rendered monthly as agreed.

Service is rendered monthly, and the service provider submit reports monthly

Yes

The contract was to Careways from 2016 to 2019, and it was again through SCM Process for a period of three years

2

 

Covid-19 Employee Toolkit Assessment

R 71 760.00

 

Work in Progress: (July 2020 – June 2021) - Service is rendered monthly as agreed.

Service is rendered daily, and CMS have access to service provider’s dashboard for reports

No

 

3

Litha Communications (Pty) Ltd

Appointment of service provider for editing, design and layout of CMS 2019/2020 Annual Report

R 289 512.20

Andile Ncontsa, Teresa Jenkins & Beaulah Du Toit

Work in Progress: 01 July 2020 – 30 October 2020

Service is rendered, and the service provider submit reports weekly

Yes

Contract was awarded to other service providers on an annual basis

4

Oney Projects (Pty) Ltd

Appointment of a service provider for Electrical Services (office maintenance and repairs) for a period of two years

Project Based-- R 12,362.50 per call out/ service

Andrew Thabang Mahlangu

Work in Progress (07 July 2020 – 30 June 2022)

Goods delivered on ad-hoc basis

Yes

Contract was awarded to other service providers on an annual basis

5

Valotorque Environmental and Hygienic Solutions (Pty) Ltd

Appointment of a service provider to provide anti-bacterial fogging /sanitation services at the CMS offices as and when required for a period of twelve (12) months.

Project Based-- R 12,362.50 per call out/ service

Kay Celeste Based

Appointment letter issued to the service provider

Contract to be concluded with the service provider

No

 

OFFICE OF HEALTH STANDARDS COMPLIANCE

(1)(a)(ii) Total number of contracts awarded = 3

1

Amathalente Recruitment (Pty) Ltd

Recruitment services

R750 000.00

Thandeka Nxumalo

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracts

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracted date of delivery

No

N/A

2

Advance Call (Pty) Ltd

Professional services in relation to fraud hotline

R170 808.00

Philippus Jacobus Fouche, Sybil Nomathonya Elizabeth Seoka, Kagiso Hellen Rapetswa,

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracts

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracted date of delivery

No

N/A

3

AC and E Professional Indemnity and Liability Underwriting Manager (Pty) Ltd

Director’s insurance

R98 000.00

Anna Maria Fourie

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracts

Not applicable, all the companies delivered the services as per the contracted date of delivery

No

N/A

SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL

(1)(a)(ii) Total number of contracts awarded = 122

1

BOWMAN GILFILLAN

Legal Services

R58,064.65

Cornelia Maria Bouwer

Craig Gerald Schafer

Craig Patrick Kennedy

Deon De Klerk

Lance Fleiser

Lyndal Joan Anderson

Mogola Tsibugo Makola

Mziwandile Ezra Clavis Davids

Patricia Williams

Roné La Grange

Alan James Keep

Andrew Van Niekerk

Ashleigh Hale

Casper Louis Van Heerden

Charles Edward Cameron Smith

Christopher Bernard Green

Craig Neil Cunningham

David Peter Anderson

Deirdre Melissa Phillips

Dirk Cornelius Wessels

Heather Leigh Manson

Helen Jane Schoeman

Ian D'aguilar Kirkman

Bongumusa Trevor Sibiya

Claire Elizabeth Tucker

Daniel Malan Pretorius

Daryn Stuart Webb

David John Geral

Happy Wandisile Mandlana

Heather Pamela Irvine

Jane Andropoulos

Jeremia Ramasela Kaapu

Joanne Barbara Ripley-Evans

Johannes George Kruger

Judd Lurie

Julia Louise Power

Anne Mc Allister

Anton Mark Barnes-Webb

Christopher Francis Neale Todd

Claire Louise Reidy

David Drummond Yuill

Derek Andrew Lotter

Elizabeth Cecilia Basson

Graham Hugh Damant

Heather Dean Duffey

Ineke Louise Brink

James William Lynton Westgate

John Meredith Bellew

Khomotso Stanley Makapane

Jeremy David Prain

Joshua Ricky Janks

Kelly Susan Wright

Keshni Naicker

Lebohang Theresia Mabidikane

Lize-Mere Van Schalkwyk

Maryanne Angumuthoo

Patrick Miles Carter

Perusha Pillay

Shakti Ann Wood

Shelley Gaye Wilson

Timothy James Gordon Grant

Xolani Nyali

Adam Gordon Anderson

Adam Simon Harris

Andrew John Pike

Barry John Garven

Gordon Ian Rushton

James Michael Mc Kinnell

Jutami Augustyn

Karen Anne Fulton

Maria Anna Julie Osborne

Michael George Vermaak

Rudolph Johannes Labuschagne

Samantha Saffy

Luway Mongie

Mark Robert Van Velden

Mendel Yriel Sass

Randall John Van Voore

Richard Ze'ev Shein

Rosalind Ann Davey

Samir Ellary

Shamilah Grimwood-Norley

Tholinhlanhla Monde Gcabashe

Victoria Jane Herholdt

Juliette Marion De Hutton

Kirsten Michelle Kern

Livia Smith

Matthew Adkisson Purchase

Michael Lesego Swartland

Patrick Anthony Hirsch

Phetole Ivan Modika

Tammy Lynn Beira

Talita Laubscher

Timothy Patrick Mcdougall

Tumisang Lesego Mongae

Ulrike Erika Brigitte Ursula Naumann

Yashveer Ram

Anton Mark Barnes-Webb

Craig Patrick Kennedy

David John Geral

Charles Zanokuthula Nduli

Christopher Bernard Green

Cornelia Maria Bouwer

Craig Gerald Schafer

Dana Edith Mclean

David Peter Anderson

Deirdre Melissa Phillips

Happy Wandisile Mandlana

Heather Leigh Manson

Iona Duduzile Leshaba

Julia Louise Power

Karen Anne Fulton

Mark Robert Van Velden

Mogola Tsibugo Makola

Paul Hart-Davies

Penuell Mpapa Maduna

Talita Laubscher

Xolani Nyali

Adam Gordon Anderson

Alan James Keep

Casper Louis Van Heerden

Donna Gewer

Helen Jane Schoeman

Ineke Louise Brink

James William Lynton Westgate

Johannes George Kruger

John Meredith Bellew

Jonathan Harry Schlosberg

Judd Lurie

Juliette Marion De Hutton

Jutami Augustyn

Kelly Susan Wright

Keshni Naicker

Lize-Mere Van Schalkwyk

Lyndal Joan Anderson

Mziwandile Ezra Clavis Davids

Paul Wolter Stelling

Rudolph Johannes Labuschagne

Charles Robert Douglas

Christine De Sousa Rodrigues

Christopher Francis Neale Todd

Claire Louise Reidy

Elizabeth Cecilia Basson

Heather Dean Duffey

Ian D'aguilar Kirkman

Jane Andropoulos

Jeremia Ramasela Kaapu

Joanne Barbara Ripley-Evans

Lerato Thahane

Lusanda Vuyelwa Raphulu

Melissa Strydom

Michael George Vermaak

Norah Claire Van Zuylen

Patrick Miles Carter

Peter Eugene Whelan

Phetole Ivan Modika

Robert Andrew Legh

Spencer Patrick Naicker

Tumisang Lesego Mongae

Ulrike Erika Brigitte Ursula Naumann

Virusha Nannoolal

Warren Hamer

Yashveer Ram

Andrew John Pike

Anne Mc Allister

Ashleigh Hale

Beatrix Gertruida Magdalena Strydom

Bongumusa Trevor Sibiya

Claudia Simone Jackson

Fahdia Bhayat

Gordon Ian Rushton

Heather Pamela Irvine

Heidi Taylor

James Michael Mc Kinnell

Jeremy David Prain

Lucinda Verster

Matthew Adkisson Purchase

Michael Lesego Swartland

Misty Keep

Randall John Van Voore

Robert Anton Cohen

Robin Moncrieff Carr

Roger Edgar Westley Burman

Roné La Grange

Samir Ellary

Tamara Carmela Oates

Tammy Lynn Beira

Tholinhlanhla Monde Gcabashe

Timothy James Gordon Grant

Umaymah Salasa-Khan

Adam Simon Harris

Amanda Chetty

Andrew Van Niekerk

Barry John Garven

Claire Elizabeth Tucker

Craig Neil Cunningham

Daniel Malan Pretorius

Deon De Klerk

Dirk Cornelius Wessels

Khomotso Stanley Makapane

Kirsten Michelle Kern

Lance Fleiser

Lischa Herta Mary Gerstle

Livia Smith

Perusha Pillay

Richard Ze'ev Shein

Samantha Saffy

Victoria Jane Herholdt

Charles Robert Douglas

Christine De Sousa Rodrigues

Claudia Simone Jackson

Heidi Taylor

Jan Petrus Kruger

Jonathan Westley Sahli

Lerato Thahane

Lital Avivi

Lusanda Vuyelwa Raphulu

Mandisi Selwin Rusa

Misty Keep

Mvisiswano Clement Mkiva

Paul Hart-Davies

Penuell Mpapa Maduna

Robert Andrew Legh

Robin Moncrieff Carr

Tamara Carmela Oates

Umaymah Salasa-Khan

Charles Edward Cameron Smith

Daryn Stuart Webb

David Drummond Yuill

Derek Andrew Lotter

Graham Hugh Damant

Henry Bonginkosi Ngcobo

Jan Petrus Kruger

Jonathan Westley Sahli

Joshua Ricky Janks

Lebohang Theresia Mabidikane

Lital Avivi

Lloyd Arthur Chater

Luway Mongie

Mandisi Selwin Rusa

Maria Anna Julie Osborne

Maryanne Angumuthoo

Mendel Yriel Sass

Mvisiswano Clement Mkiva

Patricia Williams

Patrick Anthony Hirsch

Rosalind Ann Davey

Shakti Ann Wood

Shamilah Grimwood-Norley

Shelley Gaye Wilson

Timothy Patrick Mcdougall

Trudie Hayley Mandy

Yes

Yes

No

 

2

NEO TECHNOLOGIES

Supply and Delivery of Printer Cartridges

R116,170.70

Samantha Josephine Opperman

Bongani Ernest Moale

Coenraad Frederick De Beer

Lena Mabiletsa

Yes

Yes

No

 

3

21ST CENTURY PAY SOLUTIONS COMPANY

HR Services

R186,415.00

Bryden Jason Morton

Christopher Francis Blair

Craig Andrew Raath

Barbara Lombard

Ntombizone Feni

Dumisani Khanyile

Morag Phillips

Nasreen Banu Dawood

Mbulelo Joel Mayikana

Mark Herber Raymond Bussin

Yes

Yes

No

 

4

BUSINESS CONNEXION

HR Software and Services

R1,215,452.48

Sipho Nkosinathi Maseko

Poriki Jonas Bogoshi

Tsholofelo Beatitude Lettie Molefe

Zwelithini Severiano Vilakazi

Yes

Yes

No

 

5

Deloitte & Touche

Risk Management Services

R217,478.80

Candice Holland

Cathryn Robyn Emslie

Cathy Ann Gibson

Christiaan Willem Lotter

Claudette Van Der Merwe

Daniel Mark Flanagan

David Herculaas Uys

Faith Tumelo Seaketso

Fatima Abba

Georg Trankle

Gregory Molefe Rammego

Haroon Ahmed Loonat

Izak Wessels Swart

Jaqueline Wierzbowski

Jean Adrianne Cooper

John Leon Preston Kruger

Abraham Stephanus Olivier

Akiva Ehrlich

Jolandi Grace

Jurie Hendrik Wessels De Kock

Karin Lynn Hodson

Khutso Rathete Sekgota

Lecton Arthur Matsho

Leonard Alexander De Rooij

Lungile Nosimilo Mahluza

Mahendra Jagajivandas Dedasaniya

Marius Nicholas Alberts

Michael John Jarvis

Mohsin Khan

Nomfundo Sophie Marivha

Palesa Beatrice Makobe

Patrick John Earlam

Abubakr Essack

Alexander James Arterton

Alida Nina Le Riche Traill

Allison Christina Legge

Andrew William Lane

Angelique Worms

Anne Wilhelmina Casey

Anneke Kruger

Annemarie Schroeder

Anthea Karen Scholtz

Arun Mappilaparambil Babu

Ashley James Sadie

Alan Dudley Munitich

Allan William Brown

Andrew Robertson Kilpatrick

Andrew Walter Mashifane

Antonie Johannes Jurgens Botes

Carike Nel

Catherine Elizabeth Stretton

Clayton Thomopoulos

Coenrad Johannes Alberts

Daniel Francois Crowther

David Wayne Savage

Egnes Macheve

Gerhardus Dixon

Helena Sevasti Martins

Hermine Smit

Jacob Adriaan Van Der Merwe

Jennifer Lynn Erskine

Jonathan Mark Sykes

Paul Stedall

Peter Robert Maxwell

Phaphamani Alex Thabani Gwala

Philippus Frans Cronje

Ryan Henry Norris

Sebastian Benedikt Field Carter

Sharoda Rapeti

Shaunapragasen Govender

Shivana Parbhu

Sibongile Tandile Solombela

Siwa Langton Mautsa

Sthembiso Bernard Phakathi

Stuart Guy Wedderburn

Kabelo Malapela

Kerry-Anne Forster

Kevin Govender

Kevin William Black

Lufuno Ravhuhali

Lwazikazi Nomavo Nopece

Matthys Johannes Bruwer

Melvin Roger Verster

Michael Jeffrey Vincent

Mohammed Yacoob Shaikh

Nivashini Narsiah

Ofentse Moralo

Paul Jurgen Schneider

Pierre Louis Dalton

Prashanth Naidoo

Richard Hamilton Mc Williams

Ruwayda Redfearn

Ryan Lee Dogon

Severus Bronn Smuts

Shahil Manilal Kanjee

Shelly Joy Nelson

Shyam Ambu Ranchod

Suzanne Van Der Merwe

Vonani Justice Chauke

Vuyelwa Sangoni

Wiebe Klaassen

Xavier Botha

Carmeni Naidoo Bester

Christina Petronella Dippenaar

Corinne Leigh Ringwood

Darren Paul Shipp

Derek Roy Schraader

Dirk Albertus Kotze

Dirk Andries Steyn

Geoffrey Brian Kroon

Gladys Sebatha

Graham David Dawes

Harshalkumar Suresh Kana

Johan Christian Van Der Walt

Johannes Jacobus Haupt Myburgh

Trevor Austin Derwin

Trevor Jonathan Brown

Twalizidanga Mlondolozi Mgcinisihlalo Jordan

Werner Swanepoel

William Edward Joubert

Arun Babu

Bilal Suleman

Camilla Howard-Browne

Celeste Eleanor Koert

Chetan Vaghela

Diana Fernandes Jorge

Fathima Bibi Ally

Gavin Dykes Kruger

Hoosain Mayet

Jan Frederik Combrinck

Johannes Erasmus

Karmani Chetty

Lallchand Dharamlall

Logan Govender

Joseph Zitha

Karen Classen

Kasurthrie Justine Mazzocco

Leon Talmar Taljaard

Lino Ascensao De Ponte

Llewellyn Leslie Marshall

Mark Andrew Rayfield

Mark Hugh Holme

Mark Otto Seele

Martyn John Davies

Michael Andre Van Wyk

Michele Nicola Townsend

Mohammed Ferhet Gause

Muhammad Rushdi Solomons

Murray Glenn Dicks

Olebogeng Serati Ramatlhodi

Penelope Binnie

Pramesh Bhana

Pulane Delia Ndlovu

Puledi George Tshesane

Randall Cupido

Reinhard Hanns Arndt

Roberto Pier Luigi Quercia

Sean David Mc Phee

Simon Norman Mekgoe

Thegarajan Marriday

Trevor Patrick Page

Valter Domingos Adao

Louis Stephanus Kruger

Marc James Anley

Mavhungu Oswald Mathelemusa

Muzammil Yusuf Ebrahim

Navin Sing

Nazeer Ahmed Essop

Neville Patrick Hounsom

Nita Ranchod

Nivendra Pradeep Roy

Pamela Maharaj

Patrick Farrand

Patrick Ndlovu

Peter Tripe

Portia Nobantu Ngumbela

Rhyno Jacobs

Ridwaan Ismail

Roy Charlton Campbell

Sasha Ann Yacoob

Shazia Moola

Sphiwe Titus Stemela

Spiros Tyranes

Zvenyika Justin Dziruni

Vivekananda Moodley

Vusimuzi Tummy Msibi

Werner Roetz

Wiseman Victor Musawenkosi Manyathi

Adelaide Mary Mathipa

Amith Roshanlall Maharaj

Andre Juan Dennis

Andrew Fraser Mackie

Anita Fuller

Ashleigh Pauline Theophanides

Bernadette Marie Abbott

Bester Ebersohn Greyling

Bongisipho Nyembe

Botlhale Neo Joel

Christopher Terrence Green

Clinton Ryan Wolder

Daniel Timothy Hooijer

Dinesh Munu

Emmanuel Ramasodi

Faatema Coovadia

George Caine Tweedy

Gert Myburgh

Glen Suzanne Krynauw

Ismail Vawda

James Andrew Robb Welch

Jissille Pillay

Karl Hans Meissner Roloff

Katherine Anne Jarvis

Kavita Vanmali

Kavitha Prag

Kumeshnee Singh

Leon Richard Newman

Lerato Bacela

Lwazi Loyiso Bam

Mandisi Mantyi

Mark Alexander Freer

Mark Cecil Anthony Hoffman

Mark Jonathan Harrison

Mark Wayne Victor

Mmaboshadi Chauke

Mogamat Zahid Bardien

Moroa Lehlohonolo Eric Tshabalala

Muhammad Taahir Osman

Nerashni Dharamlall

Patrick Joseph Smit

Pearl Zama Dlamini

Reshagan Angamuthoo Moodley

Ronel Van Graan

Ryan Subotzky

Shamal Sivasanker

Stephen Douglas Munro

Subashni Moodley

Sudasha Naidoo

Thrisha Soni

Tumellano Lavhengwa

Victor Sitabule

Yusaf Bhula

Andre Vermeulen

Andrew James Warren

Anthony John Smith

Boitumelo Malgas

Brian John Botes

Eugene Msawenkosi Zungu

Gabaiphiwe Ebenezer Daniel Tabane

Gillian Elizabeth Hofmeyr

Graeme Michael Berry

Hildegarde Cronje

Igna Gray

Janine Nel

Johannes Marthinus Bierman

Jose Lito Sousa Nunes

Julian Sam

Justin Diedericks

Kgomotso Pule Ramoitshudi Ngakane

Kim Peddie

Leonie Henderson

Lesley Karin Wallace

Liezl Du Plessis

Louise Vosloo

Mark Gerard Joseph

Meredith Van Den Barselaar

Mohamed Saleem Cassim

Mthokozisi Raymond Luthuli

Newton Conradie Cockcroft

Nokulunga Nonkululeko Sibusisiwe Boyana

Ntokozo Nxumalo

Patrick Michael Kleb

Petrus Wouter Munnik Van Zijl

Pieter Le Roux Roelofse

Riaz Anver Ebrahim Osman

Rodger Norman George

Sisa Oswald Ntlango

Siwa Mautsa

Stephanie Louise Ronander

Stephen Bruce Scott

Sudheer Ishwarlal Rajcoomar

Thabang Elvis Magare

Thiruvasan Paranthaman Pillay

Tumelo Faith Marivate

Wesley Nallan Govender

Yes

Yes

No

 

6

FIRST TECHNOLOGY KWAZULU NATAL

Computer Equipment and Accessories

R4,923,377.79

Arnold Sharp

Olivier Marie Joseph Lamusse

Vaughan Keith Gerson

Naseema Rana

Vadival Pillay

Yes

Yes

No

 

7

DATA WORLD

Software

R316,809.77

Ornika Dorasamy

Sathiasiven Dorasamy

Vanessa Devi Govender

Zara Govender

Wolaganathan Govender

Yes

Yes

No

 

8

H E B MAINTENANCE

Plumbing system maintenance or repair

R224,753.64

Craig Cullis

Johanna Cynthia Cullis

Conrad Johannes Sidego

George Aubrey Cullis

Peter Neil Robertson

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

9

T AND S`S HEAT VENTILATION AND AIR CONDITIONING PROJECTS

Air conditioning installation or maintenance or repair services

R167,022.57

Tyron John Murugas

Yes

Yes

No

 

10

BLACK MOON ADVERTISING AND RESEARCH

Design and Multi-Media Services

R741,324.16

Lerato Mokwebo

Adrian Edmund Klink

Gareth Cambell Mckinnell

Millicent Emily Maphanga

Christa Naa-Akele Noi

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

11

CV PROJECTS SA

General Building and Grounds Maintenance Services- KZN 

R161,606.57

Kiren Venketraju

Christie Venketraju

Druscilla Venketraju

Yes

Yes

No

 

12

FARANANI FACILITATION SERVICES

Consultation Services

R34,500.00

Benedict Pillay

Yes

Yes

No

 

13

FIDELITY SECURITY SERVICES

Guard Security Services

R6,139,391.75

Wahl Justice Bartmann

Ingiphile Pamela Mogotlane

Nonhlanhla Khethekile Ndwandwe

Venay Shaun Maharaj

Yes

Yes

No

 

14

FIDELITY CASH SOLUTIONS

Cash Management Services

R155.48

Ingiphile Pamela Mogotlane

Nonhlanhla Khethekile Ndwandwe

Wahl Justice Bartmann

Venay Shaun Maharaj

Yes

Yes

No

 

15

LASEC SA

Laboratory Consumables

R52,322.33

Delphine Ann Darling

Yes

Yes

No

 

16

ORNICO GROUP

Media Monitoring Services

R192,682.50

Jeremiah Andrew Mabena

Oresti Patricios

Jeremiah Andrew Mabena

Oresti Patricios

Yes

Yes

No

 

17

BIDVEST OFFICE

Office machines and their supplies and accessories

R602,824.91

Nompumelelo Thembekile Madisa

Kevin Burman Wakeford

Nompumelelo Thembekile Madisa

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

Kevin Burman Wakeford

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

Yes

Yes

No

 

18

COMPASS MEDICAL WASTE SERVICES

Medical Waste Services

R391,528.26

Ashley Claude Moodley

Graham Campbell Du Randt

Carol Anne Coleman

Ian Campbell Du Randt

Yes

Yes

No

 

19

ELECTRONIC SUPPLY CHAIN AND PROCUREMENT ENTERPRISE

E-Procurement System

R100,161.77

Miresh Harilal Ranchod

Theodarin Poovalingam

Yes

Yes

No

 

20

BATHO BETHU BUSINESS TRADING

Supply and Delivery of Printer Cartridges

R28,300.00

Charles Boetie Moropa

Yes

Yes

No

 

21

THE DOCUMENT WAREHOUSE

Archiving Services

R12,200.11

Eric Rodney Petersen

Marc Seaton Colborne

Clive Petersen

Craig Aubrey Johnston

Yes

Yes

No

 

22

PROMOLAB

Laboratory Equipment and consumables

R12,907,382.19

Hans Cesar Alexander Queisser

Paul Robert Queisser

Nicolas Arthur Queisser

Yes

Yes

No

 

23

LTC TECH SOUTH AFRICA

Laboratory Equipment and consumables

R3,280,399.30

Christa Swanepoel

Ntombifuthi Nnana Madisha

Yes

Yes

No

 

24

ARCTICOOL

Air conditioning installation or maintenance or repair services-PTA

R614,358.24

Josephus Roodt

Frans Frederik Josling

Yes

Yes

No

 

25

INTROSTAT

Supply and Delivery of Printer Cartridges

R45,782.06

Cindy Geraldine Schroeder

Wayne Behrmann

Yes

Yes

No

 

26

SABINET ONLINE

Subscription Services

R255,962.33

Kaethe Maria Frahm-Arp

Stephanus Johannes Hendrik Venter

Dhanasagran Naidoo

Daniel Hendrik Du Plessis

Jene Irene Palmer

Lydia Zingoni

Mathew Moyo

Pierre Francois Malan

Rosalind Annette Inglefield Hattingh

Yes

Yes

No

 

27

TSHIAMO TRADING ENTERPRISES

Supply and Deliver of Groceries – PTA

R3,277.09

Tshepo Mogale

Tshiamo Dimakatso Mogale

Yes

Yes

No

 

28

DIMENSION DATA

Pro-Active Alerting, Monitoring, Reporting, Managed Services and Procurement of Storage Related Hardware

R7,039,122.65

Jeremy John Ord

Moses Modidima Ngoasheng

Zellah Fuphe

Sonja Emilla Ncumisa De Bruyn

Grant Martin Campbell Bodley

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

29

EBESA ARCHITECTS

Professional Consultation Services

R1,203,766.50

Jacqueline Stow

Petrus Albertus Cornelius Engelbrecht

Wesley Matthew Jacobs

Yes

Yes

No

 

30

SAKH`IKHAYA SUPPLIERS

General Building and Grounds Maintenance Services- WC

R10,242,009.90

Ishana Valoo

Mahadevan Valoo

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

31

LABWARE AFRICA

Laboratory Software

R269,361.28

Vance Kershner

Patrick Malope

Yes

Yes

No

 

32

TECHNOLOGY CORPORATE MANAGEMENT

Computer Equipment and Accessories

R3,556,846.16

Khalil Ahmed Hassim

Monique Shelley Harris

Jose Manuel Garcia Diez

Joyce Maria Edna Hassim

Antonio Jose Garrido Da Silva

Taariq Hassim

Ayesha Bhula

Luis Manuel Rito Vaz De Sousa

Zibya Naidu

Ganelang Zeth Malele

Wayne John Impey

Andrea Cornelli

Iqbal Hassim

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

33

COMFORT TECHNOLOGIES

Air conditioning installation or maintenance or repair services-WC

R1,562,573.83

Victor Thando Goniwe

Yes

Yes

No

 

34

OTIS

Lift Maintenance

R92,097.19

Neil Alexander Cameron

Mthembeni Lawrence Mkhize

Nompumelelo Bongekile Patricia Nkabinde

Maurizio Gentile

Mthokozisi Sam Mncube

Michael John Warwick

Yes

Yes

No

 

35

OMNIFLEX

Laboratory Software Monitoring

R77,258.60

David Harry Celine

Paul Sydney Gaines

Paul Sydney Gaines

Yes

Yes

No

 

36

PRICEWATERHOUSE-

COOPERS

Consultation Services

R199,999.95

Ahmed Ebrahim Chohan

Andrea Franco Puggia

Berno Waldemar Niebuhr

Binesh Kumar Rajkaran

Brendan Stuart Carshagen

Charles Alistair Stuart

Constantinos Natsas

Corlia Volschenk

Cornelius Jacobus Hertzog

Deon Storm

Deon Sarel Heydenrych

Dewald Theo Van Den Berg

Duncan Adriaans

Fatima Rajah

Frans Jacobus Murray

Fulvio Tonelli

Gary Berchowitz

Anton Esterhuizen

Chantel Van Den Heever

Charlotte Fay Lane

Clinton Joseph Mitchelson

Craig Du Plessis

Crystelle Steyn

Etienne Van Niekerk

Hein Boegman

Hendrik Petrus Odendaal

Hugo Zeelie

Jabulani Steven Masondo

Keeran Ramnarian

Kishore Nagar Kooverjee

Leon De Wet

Louwrens Willem Van Velden

Martha Maria Crafford

Navin Ramlagan

Ncedisizwe Baba Thabang Mtetwa

Nicholas Johannes Ganz

Nishan Kemraj Pershad

Gerald Michael Seegers

Gert Allen

Gert Petrus Coetzee

Ian Olls

Jacqueline Rossouw

Jakobus Frederick Michal Kotze

Jakobus Renier De Villiers

Jayshila Ramanlal Mistri

John Paul Bennett

Jorge Manuel Goncalves

Langanani Mmbaiseni Rashamuse

Lorka Kay Hayman

Luyanda Mngadi

Maria Sophia Labuschagne

Marthinus Christof Hamman

Martin Donald Siemers

Maserame Marcia Mokone

Natalie Terblanche

Nthato Makhetha

Pieter Schalk Barnard

Renitha Koosialee

Rodney Duane Klute

Sharalene Francine Randelhoff

Shiraz Hassim

Verwey Wiese

Victor Muguto

Andrew Graham Taylor

Angus Virgill Du Preez

Bhimchand Soorajdin

Coenraad Richardson

Cornelis Tertius Van Dijk

Dilshad Khalfey

Francois Johannes Kruger

Godfrey Itumeleng Serithi

Jacobus Gideon Louw

Jacques Eybers

Jan Frederik Daniel Labuschagne

Jean Anton Hugo

Kyle Eric Mandy

Matthew David George Human

Melanie Fivaz

Nqaba Ndiweni

Osman Mollagee

Busisiwe Sharon Mathe

Chantal Marais Roux

Paul John Liedeman

Peta-Lynn Pope

Petrus Johannes Eksteen

Philip Johan Muller

Pieter Pelcher

Pietro Calicchio

Ryan Jethro Rodkin

Shirley Livhuwani Machaba

Vasiliki Spirou Myburgh

Werner De Bruin

Yusuf Bismilla

Craig Richard West

Ebrahim Ahmed Saeed Mulla

Gino Earl Fraser

Herman Badenhorst Eksteen

Jacobus Gideon Smit

Jayne Carol Rushton

Johannes Friedrich Wilhelm Grosskopf

Johannes Jesaias Grove

Johannes Nicolaas Boshoff

Marthinus Jacobus Van Tonder

Matome Anastacia Tshesane

Michael Meyer

Oswald Theodore Wentworth

Pieter Constant Hough

Renshia Van Noordwyk

Roeloff Alexander Botha

Roshan Ramdhany

Saaleha Akoojee

Shane Murugen

Stephanus Grove

Veneta Eftychis

Viresh Parshotam Harri

Wean Strydom

Mogamat Tape Marlie

Muhammad Ebrahim Chohan

Ndivhuwo Vincent Tshikhovhokhovho

Philani Jetro Maphanga

Pieter Jacobus Crafford

Pravitha Deonarain

Rajainlall Dhanlall

Rika Mare Labuschaigne

Ryan David Stanham

Shenaaz Peer

Simon Lawrence Venables

Suleman Haroon Jhavary

Sunette Williams

Trevor Sean White

Vuyiswa Khutlang

Wayne Errol Jansen

Alsue Du Preez

Andries Jacobus Rossouw

Andries Johannes Oosthuizen

Anita Stemmet

Anton Wentzel

Brendan Michael Deegan

Chumani Sizwe Masondo

Ebenezer Johannes Gerryts

Esmarie Viljoen

Frans Frederik Prinsloo

Gert Odendaal

Harish Ramsumer

Hemant Narsai Govind

Hendrik Jacobus Jansen Van Rensburg

Irwin Tech Shin Lim Ah Tock

Jacqueline Mary Mauer

Johan Rudolph Van Huyssteen

Kali Joseph Dikana

Keith David Ackerman

Louis Rossouw

Mariska Kukard

Mogamat Rashaad Fortune

Peter Graeme Mccrystal

Ryan Theophilus Andrew

Sibabalwe Nangamso Madikane

Stefan Maria Henri Beyers

Steven Gayton Ball

Tanya Rae

Tebogo Dion Shango

Alinah Maqueen Motaung

Anandhren Moonsamy Pillay

Andrew John Calderwood Dale

Arno Van Wyk Bester

Asanda Myataza

Ashwanth Rathan

Barend Stephanus Eicker

Brett Stephen Humphreys

Charl Du Toit

Charl Petrus Du Toit

Charles G De Wet

Dawid De Jager

Desmond Robert Peter Fourie

Dirk Hendrik Holl

Elenor Jensen

Erasmus Petrus Vermaak Bergh

Frans Hermanus Stephanus Weilbach

Gregory Michael Truter

Hermanus Barend Zulch

Irene Dulcie Allen

Jacques Ettienne Muller

Jan Marthinus Groenewald

Johan Potgieter

Johan Andries Pretorius

John Louis Wilkinson

Julanie Basson

Kevan Moodley

Laetitia Hough Le Roux

Lihor Libero Spazzoli

Linda Pieterse

Linda Voges

Malcolm Neil Campbell

Millicent Loretta Williams

Nicolette Algene Jacobs

Onalenna Halenyane

Paul Phillip Prinsloo

Pieter Du Preez Vermeulen

Pule Joseph Mothibe

Ricardo José Correia Rosa

Richard James Jacobs

Rivaan Roopnarain

Saffiyah Bootha

Taruna Naidoo

Tertius Scholtz Bruwer

Thomas Jacobus Howatt

Victor Muguto

Yusuf Hassim

Yusuf Saleem Kharwa

Zulfah Solomons

Yes

Yes

No

 

37

ESIZWE GROUP

Supply and Delivery of Printer Cartridges

R59,908.48

Deon Pillay

Yes

Yes

No

 

38

EAGLE STATIONERS AND COMPUTER SUPPLIES

Supply and Deliver of Groceries -DBN

R291,333.52

Devenderan Kassenna Naidoo

Pudmaveni Naidoo

Yes

Yes

No

 

39

VISUAL SOFTWARE ARCHITECTS

Software Services

R36,890.85

Mark Joseph Tarazi

Paul Michael Mitchell

Yes

Yes

No

 

40

MOBENZI TECHNOLOGIES (RF)

Software Services

R34,500.14

Peter Guy Fowles

Andi Michael Friedman

Andrew Shaun Davies

Charline Audrey Miles

Yes

Yes

No

 

41

ADAPT IT

Software Development

R139,066.88

Sibusiso Shabalala

Nombali Mbambo

Yes

Yes

No

 

42

ALTRON TMT

Office machines and their supplies and accessories

R38,107.25

Andrew John Holden

Cedric Miller

Dolores Sekgari Mashishi

Mmakgomo Ziphora Maubane

Mteto Nyati

Murugan Collin Subramony Govender

Yes

Yes

No

 

43

IDI TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS

ERM Software

R76,878.63

Jonathan Gilmour Crisp

Graham Douglas Blunn

Yes

Yes

No

 

44

DBZN TRADING AND PROJECTS

Supply and Deliver of Groceries -DBN

R201,872.59

Bongiwe Prudence Sabela

Yes

Yes

No

 

45

GEMINI MOON TRADING 7

Travel Management Services

R1,045,600.27

Sunita Daya

Sailesh Pradeep Parbhu

Kamal Dullabh

Yes

Yes

No

 

46

EBSCO INTERNATIONAL INC

Subscription Services

R545,761.78

Cary Alan Bruce

Frederick Dixon Brooke Jr

James Thomas Stephens

James David Walker

Bryson David Dudley Stephens

Frederick Dixon Brooke Jr

Anisha Haridass

Dell Stephens Brooke

Glen Allen Powell

Yes

Yes

No

 

47

WORLDWIDE INFORMATION

Subscription Services

R391,668.30

Fiona Bester

Melissa Badenhorst

Magaretha Anna Alwyna Bruwer

Morongwa Julia Mofokeng

Andre Jacobus Van Tonder

Yes

Yes

No

 

48

BRYANT RESEARCH SYSTEMS

Software Development

R525.00

Bryan Hansen

Anthony Eric Bull

Yes

Yes

No

 

49

FORMAX STATIONERY AND MEDIA

Supply and Delivery of Stationary

R476,931.86

David Gordon Walshe

Razeya Walshe

Jan Jacob Roestorf

Karin Dorothy Roestorf

Yes

Yes

No

 

50

TERTIARY EDUCATION AND RESEARCH NETWORK OF SOUTH AFRICA (RF)

Internet Solution Services

R1,269,787.01

Patrick Andrew Charls

Michael Aaron Silber

Hardy Maritz

Izak Bartholomeus Janse Van Rensburg

Nirvani Dhevcharran

Duncan Bruce Greaves

Faranah Osman

Jakobus Pretorius

Loyiso Gordon Nongxa

Llewellyn Jones

Alison Norah Gillwald

Jozua Smit

Samuel Mobisa Bosire

Yes

Yes

No

 

51

MZANSI FIRE AND SECURITY

Alarm System Maintenance

R111,557.91

Keseri Harinarain

Yes

Yes

No

 

52

POLO ELECTRICAL

Power Generation Maintenance

R412,022.76

Nolan Michael Chetty

Zainul Aabedeen Rassool

Najma Rassool

Emily Chetty

Yes

Yes

No

 

53

PEACOCK TEA AND COFFEE

Coffee Machine Maintenance

R8,620.95

Craig Winston Brown

Angela Barbara Ellinor Drury

Russell Crawford

Yes

Yes

No

 

54

MACROBERT

Legal Services

R14,782.68

Andre Willem Symington

Johan Derk Van Broekhuizen

Kenneth Colin Cameron

Frederick Augustus Dreyer

Charl Nico Groenewald

Cornelia Aletta Wessels

Denver Thomas Vraagom

Lazarus Mboshwa Mahlangu

Gerhardt Paul Van Der Merwe

Jessica Charmaine Jansen Van Rensburg

Katherine Mary Greig

Leila Gani

Phillemon September Ntuli

Susanna Maria Jacobs

Suzette Van Der Merwe

Jan Abraham Erasmus

Jayashree Naidoo

Jeanne Van Zyl

Kaamilah Malick Thomas

Nicola Caine

Jeremia Bongani Mayaba

Karin Zybrands

Siyasanga Batandwa Wotshela

Adriaan Smuts Van Niekerk

Anikha Abarder

Tiaan Booyse

Yes

Yes

No

 

55

NETSTAR

Vehicle Tracking System and Maintenance

R101,586.40

Mteto Nyati

Vuyelwa Masangwana

Etienne Pierre Bruwer

Margaret Wanjiru Kirima

Nqobile Pamella Xaba-Samuel

Marius Swanepoel

Eugene Roets

Yes

Yes

No

 

56

SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL LIBRARY AND INFORMATION CONSORTIUM (RF)

Subscription Services

R32,206.90

Ellen Remona Tise

Laila Abdul Kader Vahed

Glenn Brian Truran

Selloane Daisy Selematsela

Hardy Robert Maritz

Sarah Namiyonga Kibirige

Ujala Satgoor

Majomane Constance Bitso

Pateka Patricia Ntshuntshe-Matshaya

Yes

Yes

No

 

57

MARSH

Insurance Services

R2,417,224.64

Michelle Pienaar

Rehana Ebrahim

Sam Montsi

Israel Biziwe Skosana

Jurie Johannes Erwee

Prabashni Padayachee-Naidoo

Spiros Fatouros

Audrey Tshepo Obasogie

Sefale Polo Margaret Montsi

Fatima Abrahams

Makuparetsa Paul Nyama

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

58

GEOSPACE INTERNATIONAL

Research Data Management

R814,554.43

Etienne De Fortier

Hendrik Willem Loots

Lucas Moseki Mokwena

Philippus Jan Minnaar

Jan Bernhard Jacobs

Yes

Yes

No

 

59

University of Cape Town

Training Development

R14,999.99

Rohithall Dharamdev

Yes

Yes

No

 

60

TITLONYENI CATERING SERVICES AND PROJECTS

Catering Services -PTA

R4,723.05

Mihloti Shandy Mthetho

Yes

Yes

No

 

61

ENVIROSERV WASTE MANAGEMENT

Waste Management Services

R142,655.30

Delia Lavarinhas

Nicolaas Stephanus Vermeulen

Dean Lee Thompson

Croydon Lloyd Andrew Coppings

Esme Gombault

Siphumzile Jwili

Dawid Frederick Nicolaas Krugel

Yes

Yes

No

 

62

AIR PRODUCTS SOUTH AFRICA

Gas Supply and Delivery

R258,585.48

Neville John Williams

Samir Jawdat Serhan

Hendrik Johannes Carse

Nkateko Peter Mageza

Ivo Jan Paul Leo Bols

Robert Turnbull Richardson

Keith Foster-Archibald

Yes

Yes

No

 

63

SCHINDLER LIFTS (SA)

Lifts Services

R139,934.45

Lemane Bridgman Sithole

Nkenke Nathaniel Kekana

Carlos Gonzalez-Guinea Guembe

Nthabiseng Dube

Philipp Stephan Elsasser

Don Jason Millar

Jorge Manuel Dos Santos Ramos

Yes

Yes

No

 

64

AFRICAN SUN MEDIA

Printing Services

R71,558.71

Marius Ungerer

James Hart

Bharatkumar Kantilal Mehta

Nirode Ravel Rai Bramdaw

Yes

Yes

No

 

65

SEEBO GROUP

General Building and Grounds Maintenance Services- PTA

R339,774.29

Nkwane Ariel Mahlatji

Yes

Yes

No

 

66

ORACLE CORPORATION (SOUTH AFRICA)

Software

R820,615.56

Anees Mayet

Sandhya Ramdhany

Yes

Yes

No

 

67

ALEXANDER FORBES FINANCIAL SERVICES

Employee Wellness Services

R991,828.36

David Jacobus De Villiers

Bruce Patrick Bydawell

Mark Derrick Collier

Busisiwe Jacqueline Memela-Khambula

Raboijane Moses Kgosana

Deenadayalen Konar

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

68

ALEXANDER FORBES HEALTH

Employee Wellness Services

R68,076.46

Butsi Tladi

Lazarus Docter Mokoena

Yes

Yes

No

 

69

SIYAKHATALA SAFETY

Health and Safety Services

R203,717.16

Anton Pierre Els

Yes

Yes

No

 

70

JT MARITZ ELECTRICAL

Electrical Services for Western Cape

R1,073,967.94

Janine Teressa Maritz

Logan Ashleigh Maritz

Kurt Bruce Maritz

Caleb Luke Maritz

Erin Courtney Maritz

Yes

Yes

No

 

71

AYANDA MBANGA COMMUNICATIONS

Advertising Services

R805,315.26

Ayanda Mbanga Mhungu

Buyile Xolile Yamani Mbanga

Helena Petronella Lottering

Graham Chalenor Reynolds

Ngoako Joseph Kganakga

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

72

ILITHA PAINTERS AND DECORATORS

Building Construction and Maintence

R1,981,151.09

Karrim Khan

Assia Bibi Khan

Asif Khan

Yes

Yes

No

 

73

PHANDA PERSONNEL

HR Record Checking Services

R65,649.44

Solani Beatrice Lidzhade

Yes

Yes

No

 

74

VIVID AIR

Laboratory and scientific equipment

R445,360.52

Lloyd Wayne Goddard

Gordon Charles Hands

Abraham Adriaan Atonie Winter

Sibusiso Duma

Raymond Zibuse Hlongwa

Bettina Schouw

Yes

Yes

No

 

75

NAMASTHETHU ELECTRICAL

Electrical Services

R108,025.32

Lumendrie Naidoo

Yes

Yes

No

 

76

BIDVEST SERVICES

Hygiene and Pest Control Service

R1,977,944.09

Heather Dawn Strydom

Lucretia Nelisiwe Maeta

Bina Amrithlal Gosai

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

David Leslie

Duane Moore

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

Bina Amrithlal Gosai

David Leslie

Lucretia Nelisiwe Maeta

Heather Dawn Strydom

Alan Fainman

Alan Fainman

Duane Moore

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

77

NORTH COAST OFFICE EQUIPMENT

Office Machine and consumables

R225,402.56

Robertjames Tait

Yes

Yes

No

 

78

DRS DIETRICH, VOIGT, MIA AND PARTNERS

Testing Services

R201,724.01

Anna Aletta Maria Cronje

David Laing

Bongani John Zulu

David Marthinus Marx

Dunisani Bruce Matelakengisa

Ellen Bolding Mackay

Frans Jacobus Colesky

Kathryn Linda Taylor

Magdalena Johanna Koornhof

Marthinus Johannes Senekal

Mohapi Edward Nyapholi

Nontsikelelo Baartman

Riaan Writes

Shumani Emmanuel Malaka

Teresa Johanna Nel

Gabriel Jacobus Van Zyl

Kabasele Kasongo

Lesiba Mogotlane

Louis Hubert Jacobs

Melonie Bryonie Johnson

Michael Devitt Hofmeyr

Rustum Solomon

S Michaels

Siseko Martin

Willem Hendrik Brummer

Younus Essack

Alicia Els

Carolyn Frances Baigrie

Catherine Mary Samuel

Frederik Tielman Botha

Gerbrand Abraham Van Greunen

Jacqueline Elizabeth Bonnet

Joanna Josepha Maria Van Lathem

Kevin Longmore

Oswald Jansen Van Rensburg

Pierre Schoeman

Prashini Moodley

Raveendra Sookhayi

Roberto Andrea Maria Mattana

Rudolph Jacobus Petrus Botha

Dorothee Irene Freiin Von Ulmenstein

Henriette Roux

Nicholas Tromp Van Diggelen

Pieter Bloem

Roswill Millin

Tanya Ilana Wantenaar

Wessel Philippus Meyer

Werner Slazus

Carel Eduard Haumann

Clive Neill Harrison

Esme Salome Hitchcock

Karl Wynand Vermeulen

L Dodds

Mohamed Nasses Ameermia

Nooroudien Mohamed

Sibulele Thandiwe Manjati

Christopher Robert Eedes

Colin Patrick Olle Van Reenen Mostert

Illse Joubert

Izak Adriaan Johannes Loftus

Jacobus Adriaan Louw

John Christian Stanfliet

John Wingfield Douglass

Linda Steyn

Marie-Leen De Klerk

Nerissa Germaine Lazarus

Ryan Peter Soldin

Stefanus Salomon Weyers

Yes

Yes

No

 

79

SIBANYE OFFICE SOLUTIONS

Supply and Delivery of Groceries -WC

R239,172.99

Gale Walters

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

80

PIONEER VOEDSEL

Supply of Bread for Animals

R12,897.00

Tertius Alwyn Carstens

Felix Lombard

Jay-Ann Jacobs

Yes

Yes

No

 

81

Spoor and Fisher

Legal Services

R154,311.60

Dina Biagio

Hugh Melamdowitz

Jonathan Denis Whittaker

Louise Myburgh

Mohamed Aqthar Khader

Charl De Villiers Potgieter

Charles Ernest Webster

Eben Gideon Van Wyk

Juliana Hopf

Kay Elizabeth Webster

Pony Linda Thilivhali

Tshepo Monica Shabangu

David Grant Gilson

Hermanus George Blignaut

Keith Edwin Frank Brown

Marthinus Jacobus Van Der Merwe

Penelope Jean Buckley

Tertia Beharie

Dirk Christiaan Hanekom

John Crawford Mc Knight

Lodewyk Petrus Cilliers

Mark Kemp

Shanaaz Mahomed

Stephen Leslie Goldberg

Carl Christoph Heinrich Van Rooyen

Christiaan Reinard Kruger

Craig Glen Kahn

Daniel Johannes Pienaar

Gerard Eloff Du Toit

Herman Van Schalkwyk

Jarred West

Jeremy Nicholas Speres

Lance Abramson

Phahlane Paulus Ramara

Chyreene Lesley Margaret Truluck

David Hylton Cochrane

Hugh Robert Moubray

John Henry Foster

Megan Elizabeth Reimers

Shamin Raghunandan

Tyron James Grant

Yes

Yes

No

 

82

THE INTEGRAL COACHING CENTRE

Coaching Services

R225,416.41

Patricia Anne Louise Pampallis

Yes

Yes

No

 

83

OLD MUTUAL LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY (SOUTH AFRICA)

Insurance Services

R54,625.00

Iain George Williamson

Albert Kobina Essien

Bahleli Marshall Rapiya

Casparus Gerhardus Troskie

David Macready

Nombulelo Thokozile Moholi

Thoko Martha Mokgosi-Mwantembe

Carol Winifred Nosipho Molope

John Lister

Paulus Gerardus Maria Truijens

Itumeleng Kgaboesele

Peter Gerard De Beyer

Sizeka Monica Magwentshu-Rensburg

Trevor Andrew Manuel

Yes

Yes

No

 

84

BIO ANALYTICAL RESEARCH CORPORATION SOUTH AFRICA

Outsource Laboratory Services

R36,321,249.92

Mario Papillon

Carole Lorraine Wallis

Jérôme Ludovic Thill

Peter Raymond Cole

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

85

ENGINE AND GEARBOX EXCHANGE

Vehicle Maintenance

R76,532.12

Lionel Andrew Johannes

Lionel Andrew Johannes

Yes

Yes

No

 

86

COACHMATCHING

Coaching Services

R416,323.00

Susan Astengo

Yes

Yes

No

 

87

PUREAU FRESH WATER COMPANY

Purified Water Supply and Delivery

R102,512.43

Paul Kevin Levine

Shiraz Ismail

Bina Amrithlal Gosai

Yes

Yes

No

 

88

JUST JASMINE INVESTMENTS 201

Office Machine and consumables

R74,344.79

Lindelwe Grace Kunene

Mark Allistair George Smith

Selwyn Troy Newman

Yes

Yes

No

 

89

AVERDA SOUTH AFRICA

Waste Management Services

R28,002.27

Swaminathan Chandrasekharapuram Vanchinath

Harishkumar Kantilal Mehta

James Robert Bircher

Brindha Samantha Roberts

Yes

Yes

No

 

90

THBO TRADING AND PROJECTS

Plumbing system maintenance or repair

R8,393.75

Thalita Kgantsang Aphane

Yes

Yes

No

 

91

SOUTH AFRICAN COURIER SYSTEMS

Courier Services

R129,887.33

Andrew John Smallman

Iain Andrew Peter Robinson

Yes

Yes

No

 

92

CLINICAL RESEARCH EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT

Research Training Services

R130,048.41

Marijke Geldenhuys

Yes

Yes

No

 

93

STELTIX SOUTH AFRICA

IT Consulting Services

R190,579.39

Jan Jaap Weerstand

Antonius Hendrikus Gerhardus Wessels

Frederick Holscher

Warwick Dan Smith

Arno Rautenbach

Yes

Yes

No

 

94

FIDELITY ADT

Security Services

R34,822.90

Venay Shaun Maharaj

Nonhlanhla Khethekile Ndwandwe

Wahl Justice Bartmann

Ingiphile Pamela Mogotlane

Nonhlanhla Khethekile Ndwandwe

Wahl Justice Bartmann

Venay Shaun Maharaj

Ingiphile Pamela Mogotlane

Yes

Yes

No

 

95

MFESI CLEANING SERVICES

Office Cleaning -KZN

R344,347.90

Buyelephi Jannet Dube

Yes

Yes

No

 

96

AFRICAN WEB SCIENCE

Website Development and Maintenance

R60,000.00

Guy Baruch Stern

Yes

Yes

No

 

97

BIDVEST OFFICE

Office Machine and consumables

R106,002.92

Nompumelelo Thembekile Madisa

Kevin Burman Wakeford

Nompumelelo Thembekile Madisa

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

Kevin Burman Wakeford

Gillian Claire Mc Mahon

Yes

Yes

No

 

98

BDO CAPE ADVISORY

Internal Audit Services

R230,851.00

Bradley Jackson

Donvè Forbes

Fayaz Mohamed

Ian Murray Scott

David Honeyball

Nato Oosthuizen

Stephan Francois Cillié

Jason Grant Glass

Neil Ian Strybis

Barry Joseph Lodewyk

Christopher Wallace Smith

Hilton Craig Kilian

Junaid Dhansay

Keith Michael Bowman

Marnus Fourie

Bruce Stuart Russell

Imtiaaz Hashim

Justin Moore Nield

Melanie Van Wyk

Stephen James Curr

Fatima Rhoda

Maritza Hanekom

Anton Louis Kriel

Bernard Van Der Walt

Christopher Michael Adrian Staines

Hedley James Salmon

Karlien Beatrix Groenewald

Mark Sharman Willimott

Yolanda Jean Weaver-Sasman

Yes

Yes

No

 

99

PERIDOT TRADERS 120

Actuaries Services

R103,904.80

Fatima Salijee

Hermanus Coenraad Marais

Peter Vincent Rademan

Sithembile Nombali Mbete

Kenneth Arthur Briggs

Raeesa Yusuf Bulbulia

Adriaan Johan Naudé

Hermanus Christoffel Rhode

Botha Willem Kruger

Yes

Yes

No

 

100

South African National Council on alcoholism and drug dependence Western Cape

Subscription Services

R15,000.00

David Petrus Fourie

Yes

Yes

No

 

101

EMERGENCY DIESEL POWER

Power Generation Maintenance -WC

R93,633.00

Christelle Antonette Holder

Yes

Yes

No

 

102

BCL MEDICAL WASTE MANAGEMENT

Waste Management

R79,401.77

Stuart Duncan Maxwell

Bernard Elred Cox

Yes

Yes

No

 

103

DR CRONJE EN VENNOTE

Testing Services

R7,100.01

Christiaan Johannes Joubert

Nicola Wilhelmina De Jager

Jacobus Johannes Blomerus

Yes

Yes

No

 

104

BARISHMAN CLOETE AND ASSOCIATES

Financial Services

R10,005.00

Brendon Cloete

Abraham Barishman

Yes

Yes

No

 

105

CHM VUWANI COMPUTER SOLUTIONS

Supply and Delivery of Cartridges

R64,053.85

Yuraisha Mari

Naseema Rauff

Priyesh Rama

Arnold Sharp

Vadival Pillay

Praveen Mohanlall

Yes

Yes

No

 

106

PAYU PAYMENT SOLUTIONS

Payment Software

R4,225.76

Karen Genovienne Kew

Cornelis Bakker

Marcin Onopiuk

Werner Van Der Vyver

Yes

Yes

No

 

107

JACOBUS MARTHINUS NEULAND

Veterinary Consulting Services

R672,867.61

Jacobus Marthinus Neuland

Yes

Yes

No

 

108

Port Elizabeth Mental Health

Property Rental

R14,999.98

Gary Michael Koekemoer

Boniswa Orleyn

Nompumelelo Princess Dinisa

Douglas Edward Charles Doyle

Limeez Arends

Jacobus Johannes Bosman

Masixole Daweti

Yes

Yes

No

 

109

DE BEERS MAINTENANCE

Plumbing system maintenance or repair

R34,232.13

Jd Rashaad De Beer

Simone De Beer

Yes

Yes

No

 

110

BDO ADVISORY SERVICES

Audit Services

R895,003.03

Carl Bosma

John Alistair Martin

Humberto Carlos Santos Lopes

Fayaz Begum Mohamed

George Sean Williams

Thuto Margaret Masasa

Daniel Francois Botha

Nyameka Mqikela

Richard William Walker

Sumesh Mudhan Somaroo

Yes

Yes

No

 

111

TSEBO SOLUTIONS GROUP

Catering Services

R9,688.78

Neo Violet Mokhesi

Portia Pearl Zandile Mbele

Christopher Rudolph Jardine

Timothy Garrett Walters

Faith Nondumiso Khanyile

Yes

Yes

No

 

112

MICROS SOUTH AFRICA

Software

R1,103.28

Reginald Tebogo Sibeko

Mark Barend Mc Enery

Paul Stephenson

Shaun Cabrita

Sibusiso Shabalala

Stephen John Brown

Brandon James Balsdon

Rosme Jean Pienaar

Louis Jacobus Louw

Nombali Mbambo

Yes

Yes

No

 

113

NEUBERG GLOBAL LABORATORIES SA

Outsource Laboratory Services

R38,823.93

Kulandaivelu Gomathybabu Sadacharam

Marten Joost Otto Coppoolse

Savathree Madurai

Shayne Aman Premji

Ganesan Athmanathan

Nithia Prakasan Madurai

Yes

Yes

No

 

114

SECURE SPHERE CONSULTING

IT Hardware and Software

R2,614,562.33

Lillemor Gaye Blunt

Mhlonipheni Richard Macalonke

Deon Madden Brown

Gavin John Blunt

Yes

Yes

Yes

Awarded for the same goods/services through Tender Process

115

SABS COMMERCIAL

Standard Services

R3,412.34

Tshengedzeni Demana

Tina Maharaj

Jodi-Lynne Scholtz

Yes

Yes

No

 

116

BERNIBENA TRADING

Laundry Services

R6,689.78

Ntombifuthi Bernice Bernadette Zondi

Yes

Yes

No

 

117

BOLAND HOSPICE

Laboratory Consulting Services

R130,025.16

Kurt Clinton Paulse

Malusi Joseph Matsau

Pieter Plaatjies

Ronel Mariette Du Plessis

Catharina Wilhelmiena Van Staden

Sjaska Hunter

Marissa Evette Bezuidenhout

Yes

Yes

No

 

118

FIRST 2 MARKET

Catering Services-KZN

R13,803.45

Anele Desiree Sikakana

George Zak Binikos

Collin Brent Francke

Tyrone Peter Hedley Francke

Ntombifuthi Teresa Vilakazi

Yes

Yes

No

 

119

BLACKBURN SOLUTIONS

Supply and Delivery of Cartridges

R78,855.35

Nigel Schuller

Ryno Kotze

Charlene Schuller

Yes

Yes

No

 

120

QIAGEN SA

Cell/tissue culture consumables and reagents

R42,280.90

Roland Sackers

Carlos Alberto Da Rocha Gomes

Yes

Yes

No

 

121

DEEDAT PILLAY

Outsource Laboratory Services

R838,545.50

Tahir Shoyeb Pillay

Fathima Deedat

Yes

Yes

No

 

122

SNGCA SOUTH AFRICA

Archiving Services

R287,930.62

Cedric Ange Castro

Cecile Florence Meintjes

Samuel Mergui

Yes

Yes

No

 

NATIONAL HEALTH LABORATORY SERVICE

(1)(a)(ii) Total number of contracts awarded = 191

3 contracts

Abbott Laboratories

Reagents

R183 258 192,00

Brian Bernard; Shivani Keshav

Abbott RealTime SARS CoV-2 Amplification Reagent Kit

 Yes

 

 

 

 

Yes

Laboratory Supplies Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Equipment

R7 250 000,00

 

Alinity m System

     
   

Reagents

R7 000,00

 

Architect IA SARS-CoV-2 IgG 100 Tests Reagent (OUS)

     
   

Reagents

R1 840,00

 

Architect IA SARS-CoV-2 IgG Calibrator (OUS)

     
   

Reagents

R2 300,00

 

Architect IA SARS-CoV-2 IgG Control (OUS)

     

1 contract

Abompetha (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R17 465 000,00

Thuthuka Oswald Kunene; Kagiso Sekgaolelo

Powder Free Latex Gloves

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

AGBL Sub Sahara (Pty) Ltd

Swabs

R3 147 000,00

Wasiema Adams; Tamer Raafat Degheidy

800 Swabs with 2ml tube

 Yes

Yes

Laboratory Supplies Reagents, consumables, PPE

1 contract

Alfonzo Business Enterprise

PPEs

R7 200 000,00

Tshegofatso Sekgorutla Mahapa;

Kabelo Molatelo Mahapa

3 Ply Masks

 Yes

 

No

 

   

PPEs

R37 500 000,00

 

N95 Masks

   

 

5 contracts

Asante Dinoko (Pty)Ltd

Swabs

R40 000 000,00

Manase Ephraim Mojela; Mahlatse Mapula Sekhula

Adult Flocked Nasal Sterile Swabs with Containers

 Yes

 

 

 

 

No

 

   

Swabs

R13 000 000,00

 

Nasal flocked Swabs

   

 

   

Swabs

R8 000 000,00

 

Nasal Swabs

   

 

   

Swabs

R400 000,00

 

Oral Flocked Swabs

   

 

   

Swabs

R20 000 000,00

 

Peadatric Sterile Swabs

   

 

2 contracts

B2P Group (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R180 000,00

Doctor Digoamaje

Disposable Caps

Yes

No

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R10 880 000,00

 

Sterile Swabs Stick With Tube

   

 

   

Swabs

R11 248 000,00

 

Sterile Swap Stick with tube P

   

 

1 contract

Baitsekago Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R54 782 000,00

Moshupi Vincent Mokgobinyane

N95 Masks

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Barotti Icon cc

PPEs

R434 800,00

Anton Prins

Fabric cloth Masks

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Becton Dickinson

Swabs

R19 521,00

Ian Kurt Wakefield; Avanthi Govender Bester; David Jacob Singer; Sylvaine Lucienne Claude Bonnafous Vincent

BD Rayon Swabs x 100

 Yes

Yes

Laboratory Supplies Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Swabs

R15 545,00

 

Columbia CNA Agar BBL-500G

     

3 contracts

Bekazi Development and Finance Service (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R210 000,00

Paula Bekazi Shipalana

1L Sanitiser empty bottles

Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R24 800 000,00

 

3 Ply surgical masks

     
   

PPEs

R140 000,00

 

350ml Sanitiser empty bottles

     
   

PPEs

R480 000,00

 

500ml Sanitiser empty bottles

     
   

PPEs

R7 640 000,00

 

Nitrile surgical gloves

     

2 contracts

BFT Izigi Holding (Pty)Ltd

PPEs

R323 750,00

Tate Clifford Madlala

Foot pump sanitizers dispensers

Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R4 140 000,00

 

Thermometers Infra Red Digital

     

1 contract

BGI

Reagents

R101 520 000,00

 Jun Mao, Jieyu Li

Real-time flourescent RT-PCR kit for detecting 2019 nCoV

 Yes

No

 

2 contracts

Biomerieux South Africa (Pty) Ltd

Reagents

R11 536,00

Alfredo Giangregorio; Pearl Nozizwe Ngobeni; Playe Bertrand

Amphotericin -B Test 100 Strips

Yes

Yes

Laboratory Supplies Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Reagents

R9 960 000,00

 

Biofire COVID-19 Test (60 pack)

     
   

Reagents

R11 536,00

 

Etest Fluconazole (100 Strips)

     
   

Equipment

R2 309 598,00

 

Nuclens Easymag Machines

     
   

Reagents

R3 779,00

 

Nuclens Easymag Machines Silicia

     

2 contracts

Bitz Medical Supplies

PPEs

R6 100 000,00

Ziphozonke Thembinkosi Hlubi

1 Litre Hand Sanitizers

Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R17 600 000,00

 

Disposable Jumpsuits/Overalls

     

1 contract

Boitumelojwarona Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R1 050 000,00

Audrey Lorato Bereng

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R349 000,00

 

Powder Free Latex Gloves

     

1 contract

Brytte

PPEs

R1 200 000,00

Lihlohonono Selowe

3 Ply surgical mask

 Yes

No

 

2 contracts

Bugatti Security Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R34 650 000,00

Karabo Theo Kgame

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R18 200 000,00

 

Powder Free Latex Gloves

     

1 contract

Bull and Bush trading

PPEs

R2 040 000,00

Mzwakhe Gerald Smith

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

   

2 contracts

Cepheid

Equipment

R45 855 840,00

John Bishop; Warren Charles Kocmond Jr; Philippe Jacon; Peter Farrel

Genexpert IV R2 4 Module Configuration D GXIV 4D

Yes

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Equipment

R14 713 410,00

 

Genexpert Infinity 28s

     
   

Reagents

R62 300 000,00

 

XPRSARS-COV2-10 KIT, XPRESS, SARS-COV-2,10 TEST

     

1 contract

Davies Diagnostics (Pty) Ltd

Swabs

R662,28

Christopher John Oliver

Anaeropack 20 Sachets/ Box

Yes

No

 
   

Swabs

R1 342,93

 

Burkholder Cepacia Medium - 500 grams

     
   

Swabs

R3 760,20

 

Mast Agar, GC Base-500GRAM

     
   

Swabs

R546,69

 

Mast Agar, Urea Base-500GRAM

     
   

Swabs

R13 314,84

 

Mast GC Growth Supplements-10x1LITER

     
   

Swabs

R103,37

 

Mast Select tabs Cepacia-25TABS

     
   

Swabs

R6 926,04

 

Mast, Select vial LCAT-10x1L

     

1 contract

Dayseven Group

PPEs

R2 500 000,00

Tutuka Ooro; Patrick Edward Omondi Ooro

3 Ply Surgical Masks

Yes

No

 

2 contracts

Esizwe Group cc

Equipment IT

R1 005 000,00

Deon Pillay

400 AIO Desktops G4

Yes

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Equipment IT

R200 000,00

 

GK420D Zebra Printers

     

1 contract

Fathom Mobile (Pty)Ltd

Swabs

R39 750 000,00

Tony Michael Strike; Sakhile

3 ML UTM Medium in 16X100mm Throat

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Feliham (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R14 475 000,00

Felicia Sekete

Disposable Shoe Covers

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Filta-Matax Pty Ltd

Cleaning Services

R94 750,00

Peter Charles Mostert

Curative Decontamination Service

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

First Garment Rental (Johannesburg)

PPEs

R150 000,00

Carl Gibbins; Ramona Mala Koorbanally; Paul Kevin Levine; Bina Amrithlal Gosai; Agilan Naidoo; Shiraz Ishmail

Fabric cloth Masks

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

1 contract

Funnani Promotions cc

Swabs

R49 212,10

Livhuhani Dorris Mudau

Dry Swab - Dacron Bud

Yes

No

 
   

Swabs

R39 190,62

 

Dry Swab - Polyester Bud

     
   

Swabs

R85 660,00

 

Dry Swab Rayon Labelled Tube

     
   

Swabs

R82 365,00

 

Transswab-Cary Transmedium Swabs

     

1 contract

Gm Novex Pharmaceuticals cc

Reagents RDT

R35 972 000,00

Evelina Gantcheva Minkov; Ilian Petkov Minkov

BIOSYNEX COVID-19 BSS Test kits

Yes

No

 

3 contracts

Hain Lifescience SA Pty Ltd

Equipment

R14 990 167,00

Shanil Govindpershad; Guido Mix; Kristin Amy Brown

Genoextract 96 & 97

To be shipped on 24-28 August: R6,851,576.00

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Reagents

R55 017 600,00

 

HAIN-T-COVID-19

Yes

   
   

Equipment

R7 713 956,00

 

HAIN-I-2017 FluoroCycler XT

     
   

Consumables

R642 733,96

 

Heat Sealer 96 PLATE

     

1 contract

Hamiltonn Holdings (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R6 274 500,00

Thabiso Hamilton Ndlovu

3 Ply Masks

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Harvest Medical Hygiene

PPEs

R4 200 000,00

Siyabonga Nsizwana Cele

Disposable Shoe Covers

Yes

No

 

1 contract

Hlakabele

PPEs

R2 600 000,00

Kagiso Moagi

Powder Free Medical Exmaination Latex Gloves

Yes

No

 

1 contract

IC TV and Radio cc

PPEs

R7 000 000,00

Ruth Apostolov

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

No

 

2 contracts

Ilex South Africa (Pty) Ltd

Reagents

R15 000 000,00

Shameera August; Johannes Christiaan Stoltz; Moshe

4 Smartchecks 100 TESTS

Yes

No

 
   

Equipment

R12 408 000,00

 

Genechecker UF-300 REAL-TIME

     

3 contracts

Incapeace Trading & Project 159 cc

PPEs

R14 250 000,00

Helen Busisiwe Kwinana

1 Litre Hand Sanitizers

 Yes

 

 

 

 

No

 

 

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R700 000,00

 

Disposable Aprons

     
   

PPEs

R301 875,00

 

Disposable Jumpsuits

     
   

PPEs

R28 125,00

 

Disposable Jumpsuits

     
   

PPEs

R19 750,00

 

Disposable Jumpsuits

     

10 contracts

Inqaba Biotechnical Industries Pty Ltd

Consumables

R63 415 814,00

Oliver Preisig; Vanitha Govender; Brenda Diana Wingfield; Eddie Hurter; Bruce O’clive Zwelibanzi Maseko; Gerard Conery Adams; Michael Eugen Gottfert; Irmhild Emmi Gottfert; Linda Christiane Thong-Meyer; Adrian Rudolf Nicolaus Ernst Bruning; Harald Viktor Winteler; Lukman Aroworamimo; Jan Abraham van der merwe; Arthur Coetzee; Khuliso Mavhuso Mungango

96 well plate white well 50 plates

Awaiting confirmation from NHLS

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Consumables

R127 086,00

 

96 well plate white well 50 plates

     
   

Consumables

R247 504,95

 

96 well plate white well, 50 plates

     
   

Reagents

R10 560 210,00

 

Allplex 2019-nCoV Assay 100 rxn

 Yes

   
   

Reagents

R19 488 850,00

 

Allplex 2019-nCoV Assay 100 rxn

     
   

Reagents

R1 430 700,00

 

Allplex RV Essential Assy 100 rxn

     
   

Consumables

R27 000,54

 

Bar-code Reader (USB)(2D)

     
   

Equipment

R3 250 000,00

 

CFX96TM IVD OPTICAL REACTION MODULE

     
   

Equipment

R6 417 000,00

 

CFX96TM IVD OPTICAL REACTION MODULE, ITEM CODE: SG 185-5096,

     
   

Equipment

R931 518,79

 

CFX96TM IVD Optical reaction, module and C1000TM IVD Thermal Cycler

     
   

Consumables

R10 560 210,00

 

Consumables Direct

     
   

Consumables

R301,00

 

Delivery Charges

     
   

Consumables

R10 934,00

 

Filter Tip Clear 5-200 ul

     
   

Consumables

R3 283 265,28

 

High volume Tips(1ml), 3840

     
   

Consumables

R89 103,24

 

Hitachi 5-Rack

     
   

Consumables

R18 252,36

 

Insert, Eppendorf, 1.5ml

     
   

Equipment

R4 444 000,00

 

Nimbus 4-probe (Hamilton)

     
   

Consumables

R189 003,78

 

Nimbus-96 Deep Well Micro Plate,

     
   

Consumables

R27 000,54

 

Nimbus-Waste Bag, 100

     
   

Consumables

R127 000,00

 

Optical Flat 8-Cap strips 120

     
   

Consumables

R202 504,05

 

Optical Flat 8-Cap strips, 120

     
   

Equipment

R81 001,62

 

Probook 6560B

     
   

Consumables

R1 080,10

 

Sample rack fixing block

     
   

Consumables

R9 180,20

 

Sample rack plate (for Nimbus 72 system)

     
   

Consumables

R187 203,76

 

SG 235903 - Standard volume Tips(300ul), 5760

     
   

Consumables

R1 094 421,76

 

SG 235905 - High volume Tips(1ml), 3840

     
   

Consumables

R9 000,18

 

SG 65803-01 - Nimbus-Waste Bag, 100

     
   

Consumables

R9 000,18

 

SG 65803-01 - Nimbus-Waste Bag, 100

     
   

Reagents

R1 728 034,00

 

SG 744300.4.UC384 - STARMag 96 x 4 Universal Cartridge

     
   

Consumables

R82 501,65

 

SG HSP9655 - 96 well plate white well, 50 plates

     
   

Consumables

R63 001,26

 

SG SDP0096 - Nimbus-96 Deep Well Micro Plate,

     
   

Consumables

R67 501,36

 

SG TCS0803 - Optical Flat 8-Cap strips, 120

     
   

Consumables

R187 203,76

 

SG 235903 - Standard volume Tips(300ul), 5760

     
   

Consumables

R1 094 421,76

 

SG 235905 - High volume Tips(1ml), 3840

     
   

Reagents

R1 728 034,00

 

SG 744300.4. UC384 - STARMag 96 x 4 Universal Cartridge

     
   

Consumables

R67 501,35

 

SG TCS0803 - Optical Flat 8-Cap strips, 120

     
   

Consumables

R374 407,00

 

SG 235903 - Standard volume Tips(300ul), 5760

     
   

Consumables

R1 094 421,76

 

SG 235905 - High volume Tips(1ml), 3840

     
   

Consumables

R18 000,36

 

SG 65803-01 - Nimbus-Waste Bag, 100

     
   

Reagents

R3 456 068,00

 

SG 744300.4. UC384 - STARMag 96 x 4 Universal Cartridge

     
   

Consumables

R82 501,65

 

SG HSP9655 - 96 well plate white well, 50 plates

     
   

Consumables

R63 001,26

 

SG SDP0096 - Nimbus-96 Deep Well Micro Plate,

     
   

Consumables

R135 002,00

 

SG TCS0803 - Optical Flat 8-Cap strips, 120

     
   

Consumables

R561 611,28

 

Standard volume Tips(300ul), 5760

     
   

Reagents

R5 184 102,00

 

STARMag 96 x 4 Universal Cartridge

     

2 contracts

JD Strategic Investments cc

PPEs

R30 000 000,00

Siyanda Jessie Ngcakani

3 Ply Masks

 Yes

 No

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R3 880 000,00

 

3 Ply Masks

   

 

   

PPEs

R9 895 000,00

 

N95 Masks

   

 

1 contract

Joritans Logistics

PPEs

R6 999 000,00

Kenneth Mbewe

Disposable lab coats

 Yes

 No

 

1 contract

Kendon Medical Supplies Pty Ltd

Consumables

R167 500,00

Peter Wroughton Turner; Roderick Hedley Mackenzie; Skhulumi Jeremiah

Blood Lancets

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

1 contract

Kgodumo Mokone Trading Enterprise

PPEs

R35 625 000,00

Goodwill Musawenkosi Matlala

Disposable Jumpsuits

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Kgoroyabohle Trading cc

PPEs

R2 400 000,00

Moloko Patience Mphai

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

KNO Trading and Projects (Pty) Ltd

Consumables

R250 000,00

Gert Shiko Mabusela

Plaster strips waterproof (Box of 100)

 Yes

No

 

1 contract

Kwindlo Trading Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R276 000,00

Londiwe Nqobile Biyela

Medical Vinyl Gloves

 Yes

No

 

2 contracts

Labex (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R1 180 000,00

Willem Frederik Proost; Amanda Elizabeth Proost

500 ml Hand Sanitizer

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

PPEs

R725 000,00

 

IR Thermometer

     

3 contracts

Lasec SA (Pty) Ltd

Other

R558 000,00

Delphine Ann Darling

Import Duties

  Yes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

PPEs

R538,00

 

Spray Bottles PE 500ML

     
   

Swabs

R149 020,00

 

Swab flocked naso 100mm B/Point dry tube ST (PK 1000)

     
   

Swabs

R136 560,00

 

Swab flocked regular 80mm B/Point dry tube ST (PK 1000)

     
   

Swabs

R99 080,00

 

Swab plain alum shaft rayon tip R/B ST (PK 1000)

     
   

Swabs

R50 320,00

 

Swab plain plastic shaft rayon tip R/B ST (PK 1000)

     
   

Swabs

R130,23

 

Swab Throat Plain150MM X 100 Bx 1000

     
   

Consumables

R614,30

 

Syringe + Luer Slip Naked 10ML PK 100

     
   

Consumables

R436,65

 

Syringe + Luer Slip Naked 10ML PK 100

     
   

Reagents

R22 891 440,00

 

Total RNA Purification kit-6x96 Well Plate Format

     

2 contracts

Leroy Medical Supplier

PPEs

R21 250 000,00

Zuzumusa Fortunate Ngcamu

Disposable Lab Coats

 Yes

No

 
   

PPEs

R5 800 000,00

 

Powder Free Medical Exmaination Latex Gloves

     

2 contracts

Les and Sons (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R32 000 000,00

Lesego Daphney Mmusi

Disposable Jumpsuits

 Yes

No

 
   

Consumables

R230 000,00

 

Tongue Depressors (100 in a box)

     

4 contracts

LTC Tech South Africa Pty Ltd

Reagents

R790 481,00

 Ntombifuthi Nnana Christa Swanepoel

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2019nCoV Version 1 - 2019nCoV Assay (Gene Orf - 1ab)

 Yes

 No

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

Reagents

R2 811 966,00

 

2019nCov version 2-2019nCov

   

 

   

Reagents

R673 758,00

 

2019nCov version 2-2019nCov (pack 1000)

   

 

   

Reagents

R2 144 017,00

 

2019nCov version 2-2019nCov - Control

   

 

   

Consumables

R33 691,95

 

4309849 Clear Optical Reac Plate 384-w, 50/Pkg

   

 

   

Consumables

R24 428,25

 

4311971 Optical Adhesive Covers 100/Pkg

   

 

   

Consumables

R1,00

 

4314320 Optical Adhesive Cover+96w plate 100/Pkg

   

 

   

Consumables

R6 721,80

 

4360954: Optical Adhesive Covers 25/Pkg

   

 

   

Reagents

R41 314,05

 

4432470 384-Well Calibration Install Ki

   

 

   

Consumables

R13 311,00

 

4483354: 96-WELL HARD-SHELL PLATE CLEAR

   

 

   

Reagents

R42 525,00

 

4488894 RT Pathogen Detection TRG, LT, LT site

   

 

   

Consumables

R8 100,00

 

96 EDGE TC TREATED SI W/LID CASE OF 50

   

 

   

Consumables

R7,00

 

96 WELL PLATE

   

 

   

Consumables

R30,00

 

96 WELL PLATE

   

 

   

Equipment

R2 421 925,00

 

QuantStudio 5 Real-Time PCR System, 96-well, 0.2ml, Laptop

   

 

   

Consumables

R4 939,00

 

A24733 384WELL CALIBRATOR W/JUN DYE

   

 

   

Equipment

R3 333 750,00

 

A32268 ORBITOR STACKED ROBOT

   

 

   

Consumables

R4 904 650,00

 

A33621: QS5 0.2 LAP,1Y EW 1PM,1D ORINT

   

 

   

Consumables

R8 613 590,00

 

A39955: KF FLX 96 DEEP, SMST, 1YZG11

   

 

   

Reagents

R152 129,00

 

Control 2019nCoV version 1-2019nCov Control (Gene Orf-1ab)

   

 

   

Consumables

R261,00

 

DEEP WELL 96 PLATE, 50 PCS

   

 

   

Consumables

R1 304,00

 

DMSO, LC-MS GRADE ,50ML

   

 

   

Other

R970,00

 

ICE MATERIAL SHIPMENT

   

 

   

Reagents

R276,00

 

KF 96 KF PLATE (200 UL), 48/CS

   

 

   

Reagents

R1 858 148,00

 

Phage Control

   

 

   

Consumables

R7,00

 

QuantStudio? 5 Real-Time PCR System, 96-well, 0.2ml, Laptop

   

 

   

Reagents

R98 477,00

 

Taqman fast virus 1-step mmix 1ml

   

 

   

Reagents

R30 589,00

 

Taqman fast virus 1-step mmix 1ml

   

 

   

Reagents

R3 895,00

 

Taqpath 1 step QPCR MM NO ROX

   

 

   

Reagents

R6 230 100,00

 

Taqpath 1step QPCR MM NO ROX

   

 

   

Reagents

R506 977,00

 

Taqpath 1step QPCR MM NO ROX

   

 

   

Reagents

R300,00

 

TAQPATH COVID-19 CE-IVD KIT

   

 

   

Reagents

R43 560 160,00

 

Taqpath COVID-19 Combo Kit (V2 kit includes controls)

   

 

   

Equipment

R398 466,00

 

Upgrade - 384-Well Block upgrade for ViiA (TM) 7 Instrument.

   

 

   

Reagents

R294 262,50

 

ZG30SCORBI AB PROTECTION ORBITOR ROBOT QS

   

 

   

Reagents

R72 235,71

 

ZGBASCQST ADDL BLOCK SERVICE, PM, QS7 - DIO7FLEX

   

 

1 contract

Makgale Makgale Developments (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R30 000,00

Churchill Makgale Mashiloane

Disposable Shoe Covers

Yes

No

 

1 contract

Makhafula Office Group (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R220 000,00

 Enos Makhafula

 

Covid screens

Yes

No

 

   

PPEs

R700,00

 

Delivery Charges

   

 

1 contract

Malcom B Mlaza Business Initiative (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R57 095,00

Malcom Bulelani Mlaza

Stainless Steel 1000ML Manual Liquid Hand Sanitizers Dispenser Wall Mounted

Yes

No

 

   

PPEs

R95 095,00

 

Stainless-Steel Free-Standing Foot Pump Hand Sanitizers Stand

 

 

 

2 contracts

Mantso Projects and supplies

PPEs

R10 300 000,00

Hadio Caprice Mantyi

3 Ply Masks

Yes

No

 

   

PPEs

R15 000 000,00

 

3 Ply Masks

   

 

   

PPEs

R15 450 000,00

 

N95 Masks

   

 

1 contract

Maringa Communication Services

PPEs

R3 700 000,00

Meltone Rikhotso; Mbangwa Braitcliff Marivate

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

Yes

 

 

3 contracts

Matena Trading and Projects 42 CC

PPEs

R2 980 000,00

Nkhensani Mavis Smomoza Dombo

1 Litre sanitizers

Yes

 No

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R5 110 000,00

 

3 Ply Masks

   

 

   

PPEs

R500 000,00

 

Cloth masks

   

 

1 contract

Medkem

PPEs

R132 000,00

Noreen Delport

Fabric cloth Masks

Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

4 contracts

MedXperts (Pty) Ltd

Swabs

R80 000 000,00

Patrick David Wysoczanski' ; Kagiso Zepf Motsoeneng

Flocked Nasal Swabs

Yes

No

 

   

Swabs

R16 000 000,00

 

Flocked Oral Swabs

   

 

   

Swabs

R22 400 000,00

 

Pead Flocked Swabs

   

 

   

PPEs

R5 600 000,00

 

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

   

 

2 contracts

Mercedes-Benz Commercial Vehic

Equipment Mobiles

R3 174 000,00

Osman Suluman; Ockert Jacobus Janse van Rensburg; Kerry Ann Cassel

Sprinter 516cdi Phase 2

Yes

No

 

 

 

 

   

Equipment Mobiles

R6 670 000,00

 

Offer 1: Phase 2 Conversion

   

 

   

Equipment Mobiles

R14 647 460,00

 

New Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 519cdi (140 kW) Panel Van High Roof

   

 

   

Equipment Mobiles

R6 452 601,00

 

Sprinter 519 XL Panel Vans & Local Fitment

   

 

   

Equipment Mobiles

R40 199 200,00

 

Mercedes-Benz-Panel Van

   

 

1 contract

Mok Plus One

PPEs

R17 850 000,00

Sechaba Tsametse Tshepang Mokone

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Monitoring & Control Lab

Swabs

R114 800,00

 

 

Tube Centre 15 ML CB. F CAP

Yes

 

 

   

Swabs

R163 016,00

 

Tube Centre 15ML CB F CAP 10X50/CS Pack OF 500

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Mulalo Business Enterprise cc

PPEs

R13 500 000,00

Masiko Alfred Maphutha

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Mwendo Tech Consulting (Pty) Ltd

Swabs

R32 000 000,00

Lwando Masixole Stemela

Nasal Adult Flocked swabs

Yes

 

 

2 contracts

Nanotcsa (Pty) Ltd

Swabs

R32 000 000,00

Jacques Christiaan Le Roux

Nasal Flocked Swabs

Yes

 

 

   

Swabs

R11 200 000,00

 

Nasal Flocked Swabs

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R11 200 000,00

 

Oral Flocked Swabs

 

 

 

3 contracts

Neneketso Trading (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R300 000,00

Lourren Kegomoditswe Bereng

Disposable Aprons

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R1 820 000,00

 

Disposable Caps

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R2 520 000,00

 

Safety Goggles

 

 

 

   

Consumables

R90 000,00

 

Tongue depressors (100 per pack)

 

 

 

1 contract

Nkoma Supply and Projects

PPEs

R41 500 000,00

Simon Nkoma Mphai

Disposable Lab Coats

Yes

 

 

2 contracts

Noko Health Care cc

PPEs

R8 555 000,00

Moses Sipho Mampuru

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R30 355 000,00

 

N95 Masks

 

 

 

1 contract

Ntokoto Designs

PPEs

R2 400 000,00

Thandy Linneth Mathye

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

Yes

 

 

2 contracts

Nu-Psyc Market cc

PPEs

R4 050 000,00

Peter Motlhabane

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R9 750 000,00

 

N95 Mask

 

 

 

1 contract

Nursing Emergencies Pty Ltd

Human Resources

R4 123 100,00

Peter Motlhabane

Bloemfontein - Nursing Emergencies 25/05/2020

Yes

 

 

3 contracts

Oak Medical And Laboratory Supplies CC

PPEs

R3 060 000,00

Rubendra Venketsamy Nagiah

Disposable Shoe Covers

 Yes

 

 

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Consumables

R275 000,00

 

Plaster strips waterproof (BOX of 100)

     
   

Consumables

R120,00

 

Swab throat PLN ST (stick) 150mm PK 25

     

2 contracts

Ongumame Medical Solutions

PPEs

R8 094 000,00

Portia Nonhle Dlamini; Mac Donald Mbili

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R7 760 000,00

 

N95 Masks

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R9 086 000,00

 

N95 Masks

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R3 649 800,00

 

N95 Masks

 

 

 

3 contracts

Pagell Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R630 000,00

Tebogo Abdul Motsomi

Foot Pump Sanitizer Dispenser

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R4 800 000,00

 

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R290 000,00

 

Pulse Oximeter

 

 

 

2 contracts

Persto (Pty)Ltd

PPEs

R2 040 000,00

Percy Kgosi

Disposable Caps

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R13 025 000,00

 

Disposable Shoe Covers

 

 

 

4 contracts

Pharmaways Health (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R1 771 570,00

Rabosiwana

500 ml Hand Sanitizer

Yes

 

 

   

Swabs

R63 150 000,00

 

Nasal Flocked Swabs

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R5 100 000,00

 

Oral Flocked Swab

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R29 000 000,00

 

Pead Sterile Swabs

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R11 400 000,00

 

Sterile Collection Swabs - Adult

 

 

 

1 contract

Phumelele Occupational Health and Medical services (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R8 450,00

Phumelele Nokuthula Langa

Alcohol Based Sanitizers 1Litre

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R502 320,00

 

Sanitizer 1Litres

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R125 544,00

 

Sanitizer 500ml

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R695 170,00

 

Sanitizer 5Litres

 

 

 

1 contract

Redlife Entertainment cc

PPEs

R215 000,00

Khotso Mallame Mphahlele

Cloth Masks

Yes

 

 

4 contracts

Reitumetse M Trading Projects cc

PPEs

R680 000,00

Lydia Nthabiseng Mathe; Abednigo Tilo Manye

Disposable Aprons

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R33 150 000,00

 

Disposable Jumpsuits

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R140 000,00

 

Disposable lab coats

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R435 000,00

 

Disposable Shoe Covers

 

 

 

2 contracts

Rigogo Projects(Pty)Ltd

PPEs

R4 910 000,00

Daniel Gamu Mashele

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R8 830 000,00

 

3 Ply surgical masks

 

 

 

3 contracts

Roche Products (Pty) Ltd

Reagents

R82 591 936,00

William Sello Malete; Delphine Sibongile Mngxali; Claudia Boeckstiegel; Sandra Orta

09175431190 - KIT COBAS 6800/8800 SARS-COV-2 192T

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Equipment

R48 905 580,00

 

5524245001 - COBAS MACHINES C6800 Instrument

No - Awaiting confirmation on stock requested for dispatch to NHLS labs

   
   

Maintenance

R20 749 388,00

 

5524245001 - Maintenance/Service Year for 5 years

     
   

Reagents

R95 407,00

 

LC Multiplex RNA Virus

     
   

Reagents

R22 448,00

 

LightMix Modular EAV RNA

     
   

Reagents

R163 650,00

 

Modular Wuhan CoV E-gene

     

1 contract

Rombot Labs (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R619 200,00

Sarah Julia Cort; Vusumzi Siyabonga Nkolisa

Thermometers Infra Red Digital

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Sebvest Health (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R3 250 000,00

Johannes Sebulela

Disposable lab coats

Yes

 

 

3 contracts

Seila Business Enterprise cc

PPEs

R796 500,00

 

Disposable Aprons

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R1 016 500,00

 

Disposable Caps

 

 

 

   

Consumables

R220 000,00

 

Tongue Depressors

 

 

 

4 contracts

Separations

Consumables

R48 154,00

Gregory John Northfield; Peter Heinewacker; Walter Tadiello; Mpakeleng Joas Maseko

4ti-0110 - 4titude - 96 Round Well Microplate; 300

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Consumables

R48 404,00

 

52104N - NTX Bio - 2.2ml, 96-DEEPWELL PLATE, SQUARE

Awaiting request for dispatch from lab

   
   

Installation

R778 800,00

 

Applications labour - Scripting, implementation and training

Yes 

   
   

Other

R250,00

 

Dry ice shipping charge for the FBS/Trypsin

     
   

Installation

R105 200,00

 

Extraction Installation and Applications: Installations and instrument hardware verification

     
   

Equipment

R11 929 726,00

 

Extraction Instruments: Fully automated solution for magnetic bead - based extraction for pathogen RNA from Coronavirus (COVID-19)

     
   

Equipment

R15 141 661,00

 

Fully automated RT-qPCR Setup for COVID-19

     
   

Equipment

R11 929 276,00

 

Hamilton Extractors

     
   

Consumables

R11 980,00

 

GE Hyclone - FBS-SA-SOURCE 500ml IR AD

     
   

Reagents

R764 704,00

 

HM-194052 - Hamilton Robotics - RGT CONT. 1T 120ML

     
   

Reagents

R348 709,00

 

HM-235903 - Hamilton Robotics - STD. VOL. CORE TIPS

     
   

Reagents

R1 617 465,00

 

HM-235905 - Hamilton Robotics - HIGH VOL. CORE TIPS

     
   

Reagents

R569 968,00

 

HM-235948 - Hamilton Robotics - 50ul CORE TIPS W FILTER -

     
   

Reagents

R1 029 190,00

 

HM-56694-01 - Hamilton Robotics - RGTCONT LID 28X60ML

     
   

Equipment

R5 047 221,00

 

HM-806675 - Fully automated RT-qPCR Setup for COVID-19

     
   

Installation

R45 300,00

 

INS-HM - Disassemble in Kroonstadt. Reassemble,

     
   

Installation

R315 600,00

 

INS-HM - Installation and instrument hardware

     
   

Installation

R48 300,00

 

INS-HM`- Disassemble in Braamfontein. Reassemble,

     
   

Consumables

R7 492 840,00

 

MN - NucleoMag Pathogen (4x96) 4x 96 preps

     
   

Maintenance

R85 165,00

 

Preventative Maintenance Plan- 2 years

     
   

Reagents

R86 400,00

 

RNA Extraction Method - Additional Method: Application Labour - Scripting, implementation and training

     
   

Consumables

R7 685,00

 

SCN2000-BP/5 - NXT Bio - 2.0ml Microcentrifuge Tubes, Clear ,

Awaiting request for dispatch from lab

   
   

Installation

R145 600,00

 

Scripting, implmentation and training

Yes

 

   
   

Installation

R1 780,00

 

Travel Charge and Call out

     

3 contracts

Setesign (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R3 625 000,00

Mpiyakhe Douglas Karosa

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R165 000,00

 

Disposable Caps

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R12 225 000,00

 

N95 Masks

 

 

 

1 contract

Sinawe Medical

Swabs

R14 041 248,00

Nkanyiso Mpanza

Nasal Flocked Swabs

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Siyalove trading and projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R25 800 000,00

Siyathokoza Lovely-Girl Ngcobo

Disposable lab coats

Yes

 

 

1 contract

Splendid Marketing and Communication

PPEs

R25 000 000,00

Zamaswazi Nokuthula Phakathi

Disposable Jumpsuits

Yes

 

 

4 contracts

Starrate SA CC CK

Other

R184 000,00

Mason Lindsay Bizzell; Richard Crispin Lindsay Bizzel

Air Freight Cost Increases - Surcharge

Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Swabs

R25 960 000,00

 

Flocked Swab with Breakpoint Nasoph Type 2

     
   

Swabs

R33 900 000,00

 

HMedia Viral Transport Medium 100 units

     
   

Swabs

R2 707 200,00

 

Sampling Flocked Swab with Breakpoint Nasal Type 1

     
   

Swabs

R6 160 000,00

 

Viral Transport Medium Kit 50 Units MS276A

     

2 contracts

Supra Latex Pty Ltd

Consumables

R6 930 000,00

David Burnstein; Molatelo Promise Hlabolwa; Mpoti April Moalusi; Uma Nadimpalli; Kalala Daniel Earven Tshimbombo

Consumables -8 Strip Tip -BSH05SI

 Yes

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Consumables

R120 531,00

 

Consumables-8-Strip Tip-BSH 05S1

     
   

Equipment

R2 895 000,00

 

GenePure Pro-NPA -32P

     
   

Equipment

R498 500,00

 

Line Gene 9600 FQD-96A Plus Real Time PCR Detection System

     
   

Reagents

R4 682 748,00

 

MagaBio Plus Virus DNA/RNA Purification Kit II 96 Well Prepack Plate

     

3 contracts

Target Laboratories

Swabs

R49 980 000,00

Francis Ikechukwu Igbo; Peter Mason Atkinson

Sterile Adult Swabs

Yes

 

 

   

Swabs

R29 990 000,00

 

Sterile Nasal & Oral Swabs

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R26 990 000,00

 

Sterile Pead Swabs

 

 

 

4 contracts

Therapy on the Go

PPEs

R5 000 000,00

Tshepo Ntsane Basego Perrault Mokitimi

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R1 000 000,00

 

Disposable Aprons

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R998,00

 

Living Room Thermometers

 

 

 

   

Swabs

R12 580 000,00

 

Sterile throat swab sticks

 

 

 

1 contract

Thula Sizwe Trading cc

PPEs

R1 500 000,00

Bongani William Mtshweni

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

2 contracts

Tiki Healthcare

PPEs

R797 500,00

Refilwe Moutlwatse

Thermometers Infra Red Digital

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R359 100,00

 

Thermometers Infra Red Digital

 

 

 

2 contracts

Tools & Carbide Plastics

Consumables

R175,00

Judy Masterson

Labels - Foamtech 30X10 blank White labels *2000 LABELS PER ROLL

 Yes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

   

Swabs

R19 410,00

 

Petri Dishes

     
   

Swabs

R5 700,00

 

Plastic Throat Swabs

     
   

Swabs

R273,00

 

Re-Sterilising of boxes*Throat Swabs

     
   

Swabs

R10 323,72

 

Swab Stick Plastic with C-WOOL (15000)

     
   

Swabs

R431 200,00

 

Throat Swabs 250/box (Labelled

     
   

Swabs

R303 600,00

 

Throat Swabs 250/BOX (Unlabelled)

     
   

Swabs

R45 816,00

 

Throat Swabs 250/box labelled + tamper labe

     

2 contracts

Tripharma (Pty)Ltd

PPEs

R6 952 200,00

Nondumiso Yvonne Helen Mzizana; Mangaliso Vuyisile Kona

3 Ply Surgical Masks (A box of 50)

Yes

 

 

   

Consumables

R207 970,00

 

Tongue depressors (A box of 200)

 

 

 

3 contracts

Tshimologo Omolemo Projects (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R8 250 000,00

Kekeletso Motaung

3 Ply Surgical Masks

Yes

 

 

   

Swabs

R1 931 000,00

 

Floq Swabs (1000 boxes)

 

 

 

   

PPEs

R318 000,00

 

Hand Sanitizers (500ml)

 

 

 

5 contracts

Uptown Trading 492

PPEs

R4 775 000,00

Bingley Nkateko Shilubana; Kemjika Nsovo Booker Shilubana; Hlulani Marcus Shilhane

3 Ply Masks

Yes

 

 

 

Uptown Trading 492

PPEs

R450 000,00

 

Cloth masks

 

 

 

 

Uptown Trading 492

PPEs

R318 000,00

 

Face Shield Masks/visors

 

 

 

 

Uptown Trading 493

PPEs

R11 100 000,00

 

3 Ply Masks

 

 

 

 

Uptown Trading 494

PPEs

R3 900 000,00

 

Powder free Nitrile surgical gloves

 

 

 

 

Uptown Trading 495

PPEs

R12 500 000,00

 

3 Ply Masks

 

 

 

1 contract

Whitehead Scientific

Swabs

R25 182 020,00

Trevor John Hall; Theresa Hall; Ryan Neal Vogt; Shirley Ferris; Jacqueline Dale Morris

Nasopharyngeal Swab

 

Yes

Laboratory Supplies, Reagents, consumables, PPE

1 contract

Xopam Services (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R1 400 000,00

Xoliswa Nokukhanya Pamela Mtshali

Powder Free Latex Gloves

Yes

 

 

   

PPEs

R400 000,00

 

Powder Free Latex Gloves

 

 

 

1 contract

Yayo Enterprise (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R2 425 000,00

Kgathatso

Disposable lab coats

 

 

 

1 contract

Zanenza holding (Pty) Ltd

PPEs

R20 755 000,00

Zandile Nzalo; Reneiloe Linda Mabena

N95/KN95 Masks

Yes

 

 

The South African Health Product Regulatory Authority (SAHPRA) did not award any contracts for the period 1 March 2020 to August 2020.

END.

17 September 2020 - NW2009

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Van Damme, Ms PT to ask the Minister of Communications

In respect of purchases made with each official credit card issued to any staff member employed by any entity reporting to her, (a) what is the (i) name and (ii) designation of the user and (b)(i) what is the value of the purchases made in each month since the credit card was issued, (ii) what are the details of each item purchased and (iii) for what purpose was each purchase made?

Reply:

I have been advised by the SOEs as follows:

zaDNA indicated that there were no purchases made on the credit card issued.

All other entities reporting to the department did not issue credit cards to their staff members.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

           

17 September 2020 - NW2008

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Van Damme, Ms PT to ask the Minister of Communications

Whether the credit limit on any of the credit cards issued to any staff member employed by any entity reporting to her has ever been exceeded since it was issued; if so, in each case, what (a) (i) was the limit and (ii) by what amount was the limit exceeded and (b) is the current balance of each of the specified credit cards?

Reply:

I have been advised by the SOEs as follows:

Except for .zaDNA, the entities have indicated that credit cards were not issued to staff members. The .zaDNA credit card was never used.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

           

17 September 2020 - NW1987

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Mackenzie, Mr C to ask the Minister of Communications

Whether she and/or the State Information Technology Agency (SITA) have been informed of these two tenders (a) SAT154/19 for Google Marketing platform licence and implementation and (b) SAT149/20 for the provision of support and maintenance of a Microsoft CRM solution; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, (i) did SITA participate in the tenders and (ii) what are the reasons that the agency was unsuccessful in securing the bids if SITA did participate?

Reply:

I have been advised by the Department and SITA as follows:

(a) & (b) The Minister and SITA were not informed of the two tenders. The South African Tourism (SAT) is not bound by the SITA Act and is not obliged by the Act to procure from or through SITA unless SAT request to do so.

(i) No, SITA has not participated in these tenders.

(ii) Not applicable.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

          

17 September 2020 - NW1854

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Ngwenya, Ms DB to ask the Minister of Communications

Whether her department will consider scrapping television licence fees for pensioners and war veterans; if not, why not; if so, what are the relevant details; (2) whether her department considers the handing over of pensioners to attorneys for the collection of television licence fees a fair treatment for the senior citizens of the Republic; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, what are the relevant details?

Reply:

I have been advised by the department as follows:

1. The department will, in due course, be consulting on the Draft White Paper Audio and Audiovisual Content Services Policy Framework: A New Vision for South Africa. It will be worthy to consider the category of individuals and institutions that should be considered for such a relief.

2. The collection of television licence fees is the responsibility of the SABC. The department has not adopted a position in this regard because the SABC has not engaged the department on the issue. As indicated above, this requires discussions and will be raised during public consultations.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1500

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Mackenzie, Mr C to ask the Minister of Communications

What spectrum bands have been allocated to the SA Broadcasting Corporation for broadcasting (a) television, (b) radio and (c) other services such as shortwave transmissions; (2) (a) how much of the assigned spectrum is currently unused and (b) what is the list of the spectrum bands; (3) whether any assigned spectrum is traded and/or leased to third parties; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, (a) what is the list of the bands, (b) who have the bands been assigned to and (c) what are the respective terms and conditions?

Reply:

I have been advised by the Department as follows:

(1)&(2) The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA) has assigned Radio Frequency Spectrum to the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) for the purpose of providing both commercial and public sound and television broadcasting services. The details of the frequencies assigned to the SABC are provided in the table below. The table further outlines the frequencies that are currently being used as well as the number of frequencies unused:

Frequency Band

Broadcasting Service

Number of

Frequencies

Assigned

Number Frequencies Unused

470 -694

MHz

Terrestrial

Television

(SABC1, SABC2 and SABC3)

Digital Terrestrial Television

Multiplexer 1 (182 frequencies assigned) – 85% of capacity of

Multiplexer 1

At least 75% of the useable frequencies in the broadcasting frequency band 470 to 694 MHz is normally unused due to the nature of the planning methodology for Broadcasting Services and is earmarked for the use of Television Whitespaces applications.

   

NB. 15% allocated to Community

Television

 

87.5 -108

MHz

(FM)

Sound

792 frequencies

(21 stations)

140 spare frequencies categorised for public sound broadcasting (earmarked for possible coverage expansion).

535.5 - 1606.5 kHz

( MW/AM)

Sound

2 frequencies

(2 stations)

43 non categorised frequencies (can be used for public/community/commercial sound broadcasting with coordination with neighbouring and existing broadcasters in the band)

(3) In terms of the current regulatory regime, spectrum trading is not presently allowed in South Africa. Therefore, no frequency bands are leased to third parties.

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1195

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Abrahams, Ms ALA to ask the Minister of Social Development

Whether her department has any contractual agreements with (a) a certain company (name furnished) and (b) its affiliates; if so, will she furnish Ms A L A Abrahams with the (i)(aa) memorandum of understanding and (bb) service-level agreements between her department and (aaa) the specified company and (bbb) its affiliates and (ii) names of the members of boards of directors of (aa) the specified company and (bb) its affiliates; if not, why not; if so, by what date, in each case?

Reply:

National Assembly written Reply: 1195 of 2020

(a)

Company

(b)

Affiliates

(i)(aa)(bb)(aaa)(bbb)

(ii)(aa)

(bb)

The Department of Social Development procured sanitizers for the officials from ECD Projects for the amount of R1379.50

N/A

N/A

Mr. Edward Schierhout

N/A

17 September 2020 - NW742

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Mackenzie, Mr C to ask the Minister of Communications

1.  What total number of vacancies currently exist in the SA Broadcasting Corporation at (a) executive director and (b) group executive level; 2. (a) How long has each vacancy held by staff on an acting basis, existed and (b) by which date will each such vacancy be advertised?

Reply:

I have been advised by the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) as follows:

1(a) There are currently no vacancies at the Executive Director level.

1(b) At Group Executive level, the SABC currently has one vacancy, that is, Group Executive: Governance and Assurance

2(a) The Group Executive: Governance and Assurance position has been vacant since January 2019.An incumbent has been acting in this position since 21 December 2018 until present.

2(b) The position of the Group Executive: Governance and Assurance is currently being reviewed.

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1756

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Mackenzie, Mr C to ask the Minister of Communications

(1) Whether certain radio licence holders (names and details furnished) have been invoiced for annual radio licence fees by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa for the current year; if not, by what date will the invoicing be done; (2) What (a) is the total number of radio licence holders that require annual invoices and (b) number of the specified radio licence holders have been invoiced for annual licence fees for 2020?

Reply:

I have been advised by ICASA as follows:

1. All invoices for the annual Radio Frequency Spectrum (RFS) licence fees for a total of 20,795 RFS licences for the 2020-21 financial year have been issued. This figure includes the licenses held by Monitoring, District Watch and District Bassett and all invoices were finalised and issued by 22 July 2020.

2. (a) A total number of 20 795 radio frequency spectrum licence holders require annual invoices.

(b) All Invoices were finalised and issued. The total amount invoiced for the annual RFS licence fees is R 741, 258, 948.00. The Authority extended the 2020 annual licence renewal date of RFS licences from 31 March 2020 to 30 June 2020 to mitigate the impact of the National State of Disaster and subsequent national lockdown on licensees. This was communicated on the Authority’s website in March 2020 and subsequently published in Government Gazette No. 43204 dated 3 April 2020. The Authority notes that the COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on the day to day operations of the Authority which resulted in some licensees receiving their notices in July. Affected licenses will, however not be penalised and measures have been put in place to ensure that the renewed licences are issued timeously.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

           

17 September 2020 - NW1757

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Mackenzie, Mr C to ask the Minister of Communications

(1) With reference to radio signal interference in the Tygerberg area in the Western Cape, what steps have been taken by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa to address the serious and ongoing signal interference issues on VHF repeaters (details furnished), input frequencies and licence numbers (details furnished); (2) whether any solution has been found to identify the source of the interference in the licensee’s frequencies; if not, (a) what further steps will be taken to protect the licensee’s rights in terms of its licences and (b) by what date will this be done

Reply:

I have been advised by ICASA as follows:

1. The ICASA technical team has responded to the complainant on several occasions and has over an extended period of time tried to resolve the matter. The interference has been intermittent in nature. However, whenever the ICASA team was on site no external interfering signals were observed. Furthermore, the ICASA technical team made a number of suggestions for remedial measures to be implemented by the complainant to mitigate against the interference. The team’s suggestions were not carried out and as such the team could not conclusively find and resolve the fault/s. Around July 2020, at another site visit the ICASA team found an unlicensed system still installed at the complainant’s site. The unlicensed system was removed and there has been no further complaints since.

2. Should the problem persist the ICASA team has recommended a site change given that other measures were not taken by the licensee. A site change would entail the movement of the equipment to another location, the cost implications of which would be borne by the licensee. However, the complainant was not in favour of this proposal.

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

           

17 September 2020 - NW1716

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Van Damme, Ms PT to ask the Minister of Communications

(1) What has she found to be the reason why a certain person (name and details furnished) decided to take legal action against the SA Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) for unfair dismissal; (2) whether the legal process has been finalised; if not, why not; if so, what was the outcome of the legal action; (3) whether any other members of the current SABC board have been involved in legal action against the SABC; if so, what are the (a) names of the specified members and (b) reasons for legal action taken against the SABC in each case? NW2106E

Reply:

I have been advised by the SABC as follows:

1. The matter relates to the closure of BOP Broadcasting and the non-renewal of the contract by the SABC of the person in question as CEO of BOP Broadcasting.The CEO of BOP Broadcasting filed papers at the Labour Court challenging her “unfair dismissal”.

2.The Labour Court matter was finalised and the CEO of BOP Broadcasting was awarded six (6) months compensation.

3. No, members of the current SABC Board are not involved in legal actions against the SABC.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1791

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Van Damme, Ms PT to ask the Minister of Communications

(1)   What (a) is the total number of cases that were investigated by the forensic unit of the SA Broadcasting Corporation in the past two financial years up to the latest specified date for which information is available, (b) are the amounts involved in each case and (c) number of cases resulted in (i) disciplinary action, (ii) criminal procedures and (iii) is the stated deadline for conclusion of each case where disciplinary procedures were instituted; (2) whether any of the specified cases led to no action whatsoever; if not, why not; if so, (a) what number of cases, (b) why has no action been instituted in respect of the specified cases and (c) on what date will the investigation be concluded in this regard?

Reply:

I have been advised by SABC as follows:

a) A total of 34 cases were investigated in 2018/19 and 32 in 2019/20.

b) Annexure A is attached which contains the details of amounts for each case

c) (i and ii)

Items

2018/19 FY

2019/20 FY

Disciplinary Actions

23

16

Criminal Procedures

None

1

c) (iii) While the SABC endeavours to conclude disciplinary actions within 90 days, actual timelines tend to be longer due to a variety of factors. These include lack of corporation by those implicated to speedily engage in the process and the availability of Chairpersons, Initiators, Panel members of the disciplinary committees. There are ongoing efforts to implement the outstanding recommendations by the end of this financial year.

2. No action taken.

a) No action taken against individuals emanated from 8 cases from 2018/19 and from 10 cases from 2019/20.

b) This is due to the fact that the recommendations from the investigations were made only in respect of the systems of internal control.

c)Management decided not to pursue the recommended actions from the Forensic Audit report due to a difference in interpretation of the root cause of the internal control failure.

 

MS. STELLA NDABENI-ABRAHAMS, MP

MINISTER OF COMMUNICATIONS AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES

17 September 2020 - NW1942

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Marais, Mr S to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

Whether the (a) members and (b) beneficiaries of the 32 Battalion Trust Fund have ever been provided with any benefits; if not, why not; if so, what are the further relevant details?

Reply:

1. Unknown. The SA Army cannot pronounce itself on the functioning of the 32 Battalion Trust Fund or its continuation after 24 November 2005 when it ceased to be administered by the SA Army Foundation.

17 September 2020 - NW1999

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Marais, Mr S to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)Whether she has been informed that soldiers belonging to the 4 Parachute Battalion which was established in 2014 have invested in houses and established their families in schools and the community; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, has consideration been given to (a) costs and (b) trauma that will come as a result of resettling the families in Bulembu; (2) whether her department will assist with the costs to resettle the families in the Eastern Cape; if not, why not; if so, what are the costs involved?

Reply:

1. 4 Parachute Battalion was never established in 2014, members of 44 Parachute Regiment were sent to the North West from Bloemfontein as part of the team to compile a feasibility study for the establishment of 4 Parachute Battalion, (a) and (b) all members of the SANDF, on enrolment into the organisation, are fully aware that they will be utilised where the organisation requires their services and cannot be declared area-bound.

2. Whenever the ministerial authority is obtained for the establishment of 4 Parachute Battalion, or any other unit, anywhere in the Republic, members have access, through HR policies to resettle their families, within prescripts of the DOD. Resettlement benefits to which members are entitled to include: subsistence and travel expenses for the official and one direct member of his/her family to the new place of work prior to the date of transfer; subsistence and travel of the official and the household arising from the transfer to the new place of work; removal of household and personal effects from the old place of work to the new workplace in the Republic, resettlement costs; transfer fees and bond cost, if the official purchases a dwelling or building site at the new place of work within the same metropolitan area (subject to policy requirements); for each school-going child who must change school and who is dependent on the official, the DOD may provide a once-off amount for new school uniforms (clothing and footwear); interim accommodation, if the official and the immediate family must rent interim furnished accommodation at the old and/or new place of work; travel expenses of dependent schoolchildren and 50% financial assistance with boarding school and lodging fees on transfer, if the child must remain in a school near the official’s former place of work.

17 September 2020 - NW1998

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Marais, Mr S to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)Whether she has been informed of the (a) closure of the 4 Parachute Battalion at Bofulanare, Mafikeng, and (b) re-establishing of these as 2nd Regular Parachute Battalion at Bulembu, Eastern Cape; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so; what are the strategic benefits of the specified closure and re-establishment given the expected resettlement cost of approximately R10 to R20 million; (2) given the financial and budget deficit of her department and the SA National Defence Force, how does she justify the expense which can be regarded as non-essential in this period?

Reply:

1. No, as no ministerial authority has been obtained, yet. (a) there can be no closure of 4 Parachute Battalion as it was never established in Bofulanare, Mafikeng and (b) No, the establishment of a Parachute Battalion in Bulembu, Eastern Cape, is yet to obtain ministerial authority, the project is currently at a feasibility study stage and its strategic benefits will be made visible on the conclusion of the feasibility study.

2. While the SANDF is cognisant of the prevailing budgetary constraints, it has the Constitutional mandate to deliver on the protection of the country, its territorial integrity and its people, therefore, the conduct of this feasibility study is in the spirit of fulfilling this mandate.

17 September 2020 - NW1941

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Marais, Mr S to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

Whether the Auditor-General has ever conducted an audit into the 32 Battalion Trust Fund; if not, why not; if so, what are the further relevant details?

Reply:

1. No, the Auditor General has not conducted an audit of the 32 Battalion Trust Fund. The office of the Auditor General does not have auspices over such Non-Public Fund (NPF) entities. The 32 Battalion Trust Fund was facilitated by the SA Army Foundation (an NPF entity); any tenuous association ceased when the funds were paid over to the 32 Battalion Veterans’ Association on 24 November 2005.

17 September 2020 - NW1972

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Groenewald, Dr PJ to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)What are the details of the criminal complaint lodged against the Surgeon-general in terms of case number 275/5/2020 at the Temba Police Station; (2) whether the Surgeon-general has already appeared in court in this regard; if so, (a) what number of times and (b) on which dates; (3) whether the Surgeon-general is still in service; if not, what (a) type of leave has been granted to him and (b) are the starting and end dates of the specified leave; (4) whether she will make a statement on the matter?

Reply:

The Surgeon General was arrested and charged for possession of an unlicensed firearm and ammunition on 17 May 2020. It was later found that the firearm was licenced and belonged to his late father who had passed away four weeks prior the incident. Through his legal representative, the Surgeon General provided all the proof needed by the prosecuting authority which included the following:

The deceased licence of firearm.

His father’s death certificate.

Proof that he was nominated as the executor of his late father’s estate.

The above, and also the fact that all this occurred at a time during which there was a firearm amnesty for the handing over of any illegal firearms to the South African Police Service, prompted the Senior Prosecutor to withdraw the charges against the Surgeon General for lack of evidence to prosecute.

The Surgeon General appeared in court after the day of arrest and was due to appear again on the 7th of August 2020, but due to COVID-19, could not attend and the case was postponed to 20 August 2020. It was on this date that the charges against the Surgeon General were formally withdrawn.

The Surgeon General is currently on sick leave and he is still in full service and has never been put on special leave.

17 September 2020 - NW1940

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Marais, Mr S to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)Whether the 32 Battalion still has a trust fund; if so, (a) what is the current quantum of funds in the specified trust fund and (b) for what purposes are the funds utilised; (2) (a) on what date was the trust fund established, (b) what total amount of funds have been (i) deposited into and (ii) spent from the trust fund in each financial year since its existence and (c) for what purposes was each amount spent?

Reply:

1. Unknown. The 32 Battalion Trust Fund was under facilitation of the SA Army Foundation for a short duration as a Non-Profit Fund (NPF). This remote connotation with the Trust Fund ceased on 24 November 2005 with the payment of all monies of the Trust Fund to the 32 Battalion Veterans’ Association. The SA Army had no insight nor provided any direction to the Trust Fund management on its financial aspects, including the purposes of the fund and/ or its expenditure, prior to or following this payment and cessation of the relationship.

2. (a) The 32 Battalion Trust Fund was established on 01 April 1993 as a Non-Public Fund (NPF) and was managed by the 32 Battalion Veterans’ Association.

(b) and (c) It is not known to the SA Army what amount of monies were administered by the 32 Battalion Veterans’ Association as the 32 Battalion Trust Fund is not under any purvey of the SA Army since 24 November 2005, when a payment of R954,218.12 was made by the SA Army Foundation to the 32 Battalion Veterans’ Association (in the name of Miracle Mile Investments 39 (Pty) Ltd.). The SA Army was never privy to the management of the 32 Battalion Trust Fund.

17 September 2020 - NW1896

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Arries, Ms LH to ask the Minister of Social Development

How regularly does the SA Social Security Agency update its systems to ensure that all persons who receive grants (a) are alive and (b) meet the requirements to benefit from grants?

Reply:

a) All active grants are systematically checked against the Department of Home Affairs on a monthly basis, before payments are extracted for payment in the following month. All deaths which are registered with the Department of Home Affairs at the time of the monthly check result in the immediate cancellation of the grant.

b) Regulation 27(2) to the Social Assistance Act, Act 13 of 2004, makes provision for SASSA to review a social grant

“(a) at any time where it has reason to believe that changes in the beneficiary’s financial circumstances may have occurred;

(b) on expiry of the validity of the identity document of a beneficiary, if the beneficiary is a refugee; or

(c) in case of a foster child grant, on expiry of the court order.”

In addition, Regulation 27(8) makes provision for the review of permanent disability grants when there is reason to believe that changes to the medical condition could have occurred.

The above reviews are all done to ensure that the beneficiary continues to qualify for the grant over time. There is not a set period for reviews provided for in legislation, so the discretion is with SASSA. Since we do not have the resources or capacity to review all grants annually, a policy to give effect to Regulation 27 has been developed and is implemented. In terms of this policy, the reviews are prioritised in terms of grants where the beneficiary information is likely to change, for example, financial reviews are done for clients who declared income on application which either affects the amount of the grant they receive, or is near the threshold limit.

Similarly, medical reviews for permanent disability grants are done in accordance with the recommendation of the assessing doctor, who is best placed to indicate if, and over what time frame, a change in the medical condition is likely to occur.

17 September 2020 - NW1895

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Arries, Ms LH to ask the Minister of Social Development

What (a)(i) number of officials of the SA Social Security Agency (SASSA) have been (aa) suspended and/or (bb) fired for defrauding the institution over the past five financial years and (ii) amount has SASSA lost through fraud by officials in the specified period and (b) measures does she have in place to prevent fraud at SASSA?

Reply:

a) Number of officials suspended and dismissed because of different kinds of disciplinary sanctions

In response to the above mentioned question, a table as well as the graph were used in order to summarise the number of SASSA employees that have been suspended and dismissed for defrauding the Agency over the last 5 financial years

Table1: Different types of disciplinary sanctions per Region for a period of 5 years

Province

Number of employees on precautionary suspension

Number of employees suspended without pay as per disciplinary enquiry sanction/outcome

Number of employees dismissed for fraud

Grand totals per Regions

Eastern Cape

17

0

16

33

Free State

2

3

4

9

Gauteng

5

1

4

10

KwaZulu Natal

111

7

25

143

Limpopo

3

5

16

24

Mpumalanga

7

8

2

17

North West

6

0

7

13

Northern Cape

0

2

1

3

Western Cape

5

0

1

6

Total

156

26

76

258

For further ease of reference, the following graph was used to also depict the different types of disciplinary sanctions per Region for a period of 5 years.

Graph 1:Different types of disciplinary sanctions per Region for a period of 5 years see the link:

https://pmg.org.za/files/RNW1895_-_Suspension_and_Dismissal_Table.pdf

Analysis of the above mentioned Table and the Graph

  • A total number of 156, 26 and 76 cases were recoded in the last five financial years for precautionary suspension, suspension without pay and dismissals for fraud respectively;
  • A grand total of 258 cases were recorded in the last five years in all Regions
  • KwaZulu Natal recorded the highest numbers in precautionary and dismissal categories. Overall KZN accounts for 55% which is the highest as compared to other Regions
  • On the other hand Northern Cape and Western Cape recorded the lowest cases which accounts for 1.6% and 2.3% respectively
  • When it comes to suspension without pay, Mpumalanga recorded the highest number namely 8 followed by KZN with 7 cases
  • Both Limpopo and Eastern Cape recorded a total number of 16 cases in the category of employees dismissed for fraud. It is pleasing to note the firm stance taken by both Regions to ensure behavioral changes when it comes to fraud
  • It should be noted that there were no relataed cases recorded at Head Office

(a) ii. Amount of money lost through fraud

The total amount of money lost through fraud over the past 5 financial years is approximately R282, 476,193.

(b) Measures in place to prevent fraud at SASSA

SASSA has a Fraud Prevention Strategy that is premised on four key pillars, namely Prevention, Detection, Investigation and Resolution.

The following Fraud prevention measures and mechanisms are being implemented by SASSA:

(b)1 Policies and Procedures

The Agency has developed and is implementing various policies and procedures in accordance with the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) and supporting Treasury Regulations, to which all employees and other stakeholders are required to comply. This creates an environment which is conducive for good corporate governance and the prevention of fraud.

(b)2 Internal controls and compliance

Management regularly identifies significant fraud risks and implements process level controls, systems and procedures to identify and prevent fraud and corruption. Types of controls typically include:

  • Authorisation controls (approval of expenditure or grants)
  • Supervisory controls (supervising day-to-day operations)
  • Process controls
  • System controls
  • Financial controls.

A major control that was implemented since August 2019 is bank account verification to ensure that grant money is paid into the bank account of the rightful grant beneficiary.

SASSA is piloting a biometrics solution for staff who access the grants system in order to ensure that transactions are performed by authorised persons.

(b)3 Fraud Risk Identification and Assessment

Fraud risk identification and assessment is conducted at least annually in order to identify the inherent exposures to fraud within the current operating systems and procedures.

(b)4 Fraud awareness

The Agency conducts fraud and corruption awareness sessions and training for SASSA employees and the public in order to assist in the prevention, detection and reporting of fraud and corruption.

Line managers also share information on fraud prevention measures with employees under their supervision.

(b)5 Code of Conduct and Ethics

SASSA has a Code of Conduct that has been shared with all the employees. The Code is aimed at creating an ethical organization culture, which is essential for fraud prevention.

(b)6 Disciplinary Code and Procedures

The Agency’s Disciplinary Code establishes standards for the conduct of all employees and the relevant disciplinary procedures to be adopted for breaches of the code. Consistent and effective dealing with identified instances of misconduct through fraud and corruption serves to enforce Fraud Prevention, by acting as a deterrent to other employees.

(b)7 Employee Screening

SASSA screens employees during the recruitment process.

(b)8 Communication

SASSA uses various tools to communicate with internal and external stakeholders about some of the anti-fraud awareness messages. The appropriate communication of anti-fraud measures and their results is essential to build trust in the social security system.

(b)9 Partnerships with stakeholders

SASSA is working closely with stakeholders in the banking sector such as the South African Banking Risk Information Centre, SA Reserve Bank, SA Post Office, National Treasury, Banking Association of South Africa, Payment Association of South Africa and various commercial banks in order to prevent fraud targeting social grants money.

SASSA has been sharing data with other government entities in order to validate information supplied by grant applicants to prevent and minimise inclusion errors and fraud.

The Agency also works closely with law enforcement agencies in detecting and combating fraud.

(b)10 Detection

Combined assurance (management, internal and external assurance providers) measures are also being employed to detect fraud and corruption within the Agency. The Internal Audit function plays a vital role in the detection of fraud and corruption. The external audit function is an important control in the detection of fraud. Various controls are also implemented in order to correct the controls weaknesses identified by the Auditor General of South Africa.

SASSA also acts on fraud and corruption cases that are reported through the following mechanisms:

(a) Public Service Commission (PSC) Fraud Hotline

(b) SASSA General Customer Care Contact Centre

(c) Whistle Blowing.

Pro-active fraud detection reviews, utilising data analytics are conducted regularly within business units with a high risk of fraud and error based on historic instances or other risk factors. This acts as an important mechanism in the detection of incidences of fraud and corruption.A critical component of detecting fraud is mutual sharing of data between SASSA, SAPO and other entities.

17 September 2020 - NW1971

Profile picture: Groenewald, Dr PJ

Groenewald, Dr PJ to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)(a) How many tonnes of ammunition that is currently stored at 97 Ammunition Depot in De Aar have become old and less accurate, have reached the end of their shelf life-span and/or the explosives have supposedly begun to crystallise, (b) what are the calibres of the specified ammunition, (c) what number of each type of ammunition is at the depot and (d) what are the manufacturing dates of the ammunition; (2) whether her department intends to take steps to remove the ageing ammunition; if not, why not; if so, (a) what steps and (b) how long will it take to complete the specified steps; (3) whether the lightning conductors at the specified depot is serviced annually; If not, (a) why not and (b) what number of ammunition depots’ lightning conductors (i) have been fully serviced and/or (ii) must still be serviced this year; (4) whether the security of the area complies with all requirements for ammunition depots; if not, why not; if so, who is responsible for the security?

Reply:

(1) Most of the ammunition at the depot is old, but the ammunition is however not unstable. The life cycle of ammunition is not given in years, and it cannot be predetermined when ammunition reaches the end of life, or even when it will start to become unstable. For that reason annual inspections and functional testing are executed by the South African National Defence Force (SANDF). Various factors however influence the time span on how ammunition age and potentially become unsafe. The two worst case environments for explosives are heat and humidity, and therefore the controlled storage inside the licensed ammunition warehouses is. Annual inspections and testing are executed against specifications, designed for each type and configuration of ammunition to ensure both functioning as well as safety. Furthermore unserviceable ammunition is ammunition that is not functioning within specification, but it is still safe for storage, handling and transport. There are serviceable and unserviceable ammunition in the depot, where the backlog on disposal is on the unserviceable ammunition. There is no unstable ammunition in the depot. As soon as there is an indication from the annual testing and inspection that the possibility of ammunition become unsafe is there, these ammunition is destroyed or even sold back to the original equipment manufacturer before it could become unstable, in order to ensure that there is no safety implication from old ammunition in the depots.

At 97 Ammunition Depot there are approximately 8 000 tons (Nett Explosive Content) of unserviceable ammunition, measured in the explosive weight of the ammunition. This is primarily made up of small arms ammunition, mortar ammunition, hand and rifle grenades, aircraft bombs, artillery shells and medium calibre ammunition. The tonnage changes on a daily basis as ammunition is sold or destroyed, or as ammunition are regraded due to the inspections and dynamic testing. The phase out of weapon systems also has an influence on these tonnages.

(2) Ammunition is stored according to predetermined safety groupings in various designed for and licenced ammunition warehouses. These are designed to contain a possible explosion to those specific warehouses, and are thus traversed with a minimum safety distance to the next warehouse. The licence of each warehouse will indicate what types of ammunition can be stored there, as well as the maximum quantity of each type, in order to ensure the containment of a possible explosion. There are also an outside safety distance, taking into account all ammunition and explosives in all warehouses, to ensure the safety of personnel and infrastructure outside the depot. There is furthermore no ammunition or explosives stored in field storage, which could nullify this safety distances.

The department will carry on with the following steps to manage and reduce the ageing of ammunition. While the under mentioned steps will drastically reduce the old ammunition in the depot during the next 8 years, the ammunition will be able to be stored, handled and transported safely due to the storage conditions and annual management and prioritisation of the ammunition processes :

a. Continue with the annual inspections and dynamic testing in order to prioritise the disposal of potential unsafe ammunition.

b. Continue with the annual surveillance and chemical analyses of the propellant program, as was done for more than 10 years already, in conjunction with the industry.

c. Continue with ammunition disposal of approximately 1000 tons a year by means of sales through Armscor, which include aircraft bombs, 68mm

obsolete rockets, medium calibre ammunition and 90mm redundant ammunition, as well as conventional destruction of all other types of ammunition.

d. The conclusion of the upgrading and maintenance contract of the inert deforming facility, which was done over the past three years, followed by the already planned expansion of the facility to include explosive filled breakdown of ammunition, with the 140mm ammunition as a pilot project, over the next 4 years.

e. The rework of the mortar bombs on a new charge and tail configuration, which will upgrade the bombs from an obsolete and unserviceable condition to a serviceable condition for force preparation and force employment.

f. The placement of a destruction contract for small arms ammunition on the original equipment manufacturer is also in process as was twice done in the past.

(3) All ammunition depots and installations are to meet the requirements in terms of SANS Code of Practice 10313 of 2012, in conjunction with SANS 62305 and IEC Standards. Currently the lightning conductors are not certified. During April 2019 a process commenced to rectify these requirements. A Scope of Work and motivations were submitted to the Procurement Board, and service providers were invited on various occasions during 2020 for quotations in order to certify the lightning conductors. All three ammunition depots’ contracts have been approved for the annual service of the lightning conductors, and contractors has thus already been appointed. All funding has been put in place for these contracts, and all lightning conductors at the various depots will be certified and serviceable after the completion of this process by the contracted supplier. The Department of Defence is in the process of outsourcing the training of members in the assessment, testing, repair, maintenance and certification of the lightning conductors within the Department. The capability would thus be beneficial to the Department in the long term, as all other facilities would also be internally serviced in terms of laid down prescripts. This training should be completed in the next academic year.

(4) At the depot there is an outside perimeter fence, a three tier high security fence, guards as well as a two lock system on each of the ammunition warehouses, with all ammunition locked in warehouses. The high security fence consists of a three tier fence system, of which the middle fence is an electrical fence. The lapse of a maintenance contract entails that electricity of this fence is shut down. The three tier fence, inclusive of the gates, are however still serviceable and in working condition. Additional guards have been put in place to enhance security while the electrical fence is switched off. The maintenance of the high security fence is currently effectively executed by SANDF personnel. Once the project to upgrade the high security fences is finalised, a maintenance contract for the new fences and systems will be awarded again, as the SANDF does not have the capability to manage the electrical fence.

17 September 2020 - NW1862

Profile picture: Xaba, Mr VC

Xaba, Mr VC to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

(1)What are the benefits for the Republic’s participation in Operation Copper contained in the Memorandum of Understanding on Maritime Security Cooperation aimed at strengthening anti-piracy efforts that was signed by Mozambique, Tanzania and the Republic in 2012; (2) whether, given the nonparticipation of the other two countries in the operation and the fact that marine piracy remains a threat to all countries bordering the Western Indian ocean, she has found that the resources would be better used to patrol the exclusive economic zone of the Republic; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, what are the relevant details

Reply:

(1) In accordance to the Memorandum of Understanding, the Republic has a vested interest in the political, economic, social and security objectives to promote peace, stability and the well-being of its neighbours. This is affected by protecting the integrity of the territorial waters against any illegal activities that undermines security and economic development, which includes piracy. It is the conviction that close co-operation and a mutual understanding as well as collaboration in matters of maritime security will be mutually beneficial to all parties concerned.

It provides a deterrence and is preventative to maritime piracy and maritime crimes committed at sea. The presence of Islamic militants in Northern Mozambique and the potential maritime threat they pose, requires the protection of the sea lanes within the Mozambique Channel that convey a large percentage of South Africa’s fuel requirements. Attacks from the sea are proving a very viable option with a very low risk of being halted/stopped. If left unchecked, Northern Mozambique could very well become a “launching site” for further criminal activities and networks in the region, which may include piracy, adopting asymmetric tactics destabilising and rendering the adjoining seas dangerous.

It also ensures valuable time at sea and training for crew members of the South African Navy (SAN) and keeps the ships’ crews interested in their profession. Relationships are developed with the Mozambican Security Forces and the local population. It is also a valuable source in the gathering of maritime related information.

(2) The SADC Maritime Security Strategy was an attempt to address piracy in the SADC Indian Ocean. The benefits derived from this Strategy and the subsequent signing of the Trilateral Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the RSA, Mozambique and Tanzania, signalled an end to “sea blindness within the SADC east coast, as well as engaging in discussions surrounding maritime security and the “blue economy”.

The promulgation of the Maritime Security Strategy and trilateral MOU was the confirmation of closer co-operation between member states on the SADC east coast to solve a common threat. This should be seen in a positive light firstly as it not just engendered closer co-operation amongst the Navies of the SADC east coast it’s also the first positive step in unlocking the maritime estate of the SADC and with it the blue economy.

Further to the above the SADC Maritime Security Strategy gave effect to the 13th Ordinary Session of the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government that declared that there is a need “to develop a comprehensive and coherent strategy” in order to achieve Africa’s Security and Safety, as well as developmental aspirations, particularly within the maritime domain.

It further charged the Regional Economic Communities to develop, coordinate and harmonize policies and strategies to improve the African maritime security and safety standards, as well as the African maritime economy for more wealth creation from its oceans and seas.

17 September 2020 - NW1826

Profile picture: Komane, Ms RN

Komane, Ms RN to ask the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans

What are the reasons that the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) is (a) disregarding court orders prohibiting the eviction of the community of Marieville in Ekurhuleni, of which the last court order that was issued in June 2020 ruled that the SANDF must immediately return to the community all building materials and possessions confiscated and (b) still harassing the community?

Reply:

1. What is the reason that the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) is

a) The SANDF did not disregard any court order. The SANDF does not have any plan to evict anyone without any court order and its eviction court application process is under way. The members of the community would stay there until the eviction process by the SANDF has been adjudicated upon and finalised.

It is also important to mention that the residents who left the Happiness Village or the military land concerned have done so freely and this was after the Ekurhuleni Municipality intervened by – inter alia – asking the community members who wanted to be relocated to a place called Zamani, to be so relocated and the process ran smoothly with the SANDF assisting the Municipality therein. The building materials and possessions that have been removed are those belonging to the very same community members who have agreed to move to Zamani. This was done in order to enable the Municipality to know how many shacks and families have been moved and how many are still to remain at Happiness Village/ military land concerned. This approach is intended to help the Municipality to manage the situation better, should the eviction by SANDF of those illegal occupants succeeds.

b) The SANDF members are not harassing anyone and our plea has always been, when the eviction process is still underway, the illegal occupants should be requested not to bring extra shacks and/ or allow new occupants to prevent the mushrooming of the number of people staying there, because if this could be allowed, same will create a very serious problem for the Municipality if it is to assist with an alternative accommodation should they be finally evicted.

17 September 2020 - NW1495

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Masango, Ms B to ask the Minister of Social Development

What steps will the SA Social Security Agency take to (a) proceed to back pay or catch up with the R350 grant payments that did not occur for the month of May and (b) ensure that payments are made to all approved applicants for the promised six months which ends in October 2020?

Reply:

a) SASSA is currently finalising all payments for applications approved for May 2020. Of the 4 424 720applications approved for payment in May, a total of 3 429 810 had been paid by 8 July 2020. The delay in paying the remainder was as a result of approximately 1 million additional applications being approved, after SASSA reconsidered all previously declined applications against the refreshed database received from UIF. These clients received new SMS messages requesting them to provide their banking details. SASSA will pay them as soon as wereceive theapplicant’s bank details, and National Treasury completes their accounts verification.

SASSA will request Post Bank to open accounts for those clients who have not provided their banking preferences after a period of 5 days from the date messages are sent to them.

b) Validations for the 938 554 applications received in June, as well as the 6 534 754 applications received in May will commence as from 15 July. Every application will be re-validated on a monthly basis to confirm that the applicant still qualifies to receive the grant, as circumstances could have changed in the interim. The payments for all those approved will be extracted and disbursed before end July. The July payments will then follow the same process and be disbursed by mid-August, with August payments being disbursed by end August. The payments will then be current, with payments for September and October being made in the month, for the month.

17 September 2020 - NW1686

Profile picture: Van Der Walt, Ms D

Van Der Walt, Ms D to ask the Minister of Basic Education to ask the Minister of Basic Education

(1) On what date was the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) concluded between her department and the Department of Social Development with respect to the schooling of children whose caregivers receive child support grants; (2) what are the obligations of her department in terms of the MOU; (3) whether the specified obligations are still effective; if not, why not; if so, what are the relevant details; (4) will she furnish Mrs D van der Walt with a copy of the MOU?

Reply:

1. The Department of Basic Education (DBE) , Department of Social Development and South Africa Social Security Agency signed an Implementation Protocol on 09 March 2012, which is the effective date.
2. Kindly refer to clauses 3.3 and 5 of the Implementation Protocol, which provide for the roles and responsibilities of the DBE; and the combined responsibilities of the Parties respectively.
3. It is still effective.
4. Kindly find attached a copy of the Implementation Protocol.

16 September 2020 - NW1834

Profile picture: Sindane, Mr P

Sindane, Mr P to ask the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services

(a) What total number of (i)(aa) prison officials and (bb) inmates have been affected by COVID-19 to date and (ii) the specified persons have since died in each case and (b) how is his department dealing with overcrowding in correctional centres during the lockdown to curb the spread of COVID-19?

Reply:

(a)(i) (aa) A total of 4 136 officials have been infected with COVID-19 as at 23 August 2020.

(bb) A total of 2 336 inmates have been affected by COVID-19 as at 23 August 2020.

(ii) A total of 60 officials and 43 inmates have died due to COVID-19 related illnesses as at 23 August 2020.

(b) The President of South Africa in terms of section 84(2)(j) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, read with section 82(1)(a) of the Correctional Services Act, 1998 (Act No. 111 of 1998) and for the purpose of addressing, managing and combatting the spread of the COVID-19 virus in all Correctional Centres in the Republic, authorised the consideration and placement on parole of certain category of sentenced offenders, who are or would have been incarcerated on 27 April 2020 subject to such conditions as may be approved by the Correctional Supervision and Parole Board under whose jurisdiction such sentenced offenders may fall.

The Special Parole Dispensation was announced by the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services on 08 May 2020. Approximately 19 000 sentenced offenders who committed non-violent crime and were left with 60 months or less before the minimum detention period (MDP) will be released on parole.

  • As at 20 August 2020, a total 10 153 offenders have been released on Special Parole Dispensation.
  • The inmate population on 20 May 2020, (releases started on this date) was 155 069 which translated into an occupancy level of 130.78% and an overcrowding level of 30.78%.
  • The inmate population as on 20 August 2020, was 138 070, which translates into an occupancy level of 114.52% and an overcrowding level of 14.52%.
  • Since the commencement of the implementation of the 2020 Covid-19 Special Parole Dispensation the department down managed overcrowding in correctional centres with an overall of 16.26% (from 155 069 to 138 070)
  • The above are examples of how the Department of Correctional Services is successfully dealing with overcrowding in correctional centres to curb the spread of COVID-19.
  • The Department also recommend that the Courts should consider alternative sentencing as this will also assist with the management of the COVID-19 in correctional services.

END

15 September 2020 - NW773

Profile picture: De Freitas, Mr MS

De Freitas, Mr MS to ask the Minister of Finance

(1)Whether he took into consideration the (a) short-, (b) medium- and (c) long-term implications for the tourism sector when he made his announcement on 24 April 2020; if not, why not; if so, what (i) are the implications in each specified case, (ii) fund will he remove from the Tourism budget and (iii) criteria did he apply to slash the budget; (2) what steps will the National Treasury take to ensure that the tourism sector is not decimated by the time the sector can return to operate?

Reply:

1. On 24 April 2020, the Minister of Finance outlined a R500 billion economic support package in fiscal and monetary policy interventions to be implemented in the immediate, short-run with long-run sustainability. In terms of this, the Minister outlined that the fiscal response is characterised through five key components and provided the sequential order of interventions which involve (i) the scaling up of efforts to deal with the immediate effects of the pandemic, characterised through an extraordinary health budget (ii) substantial increase of social relief measures for the distressed (iii) rollout of an extensive set of tax relief and support for workers (iv) phased re-opening of the economy (v) supportive monetary and financial market measures -

(i)

(a) the immediateaftermath of the CoVID-19 pandemic had huge implications for the tourism sector, with many countries going into lockdown and imposing travel restrictions, this meant domestic and international tourism had been suspended in response to the pandemic, the contraction in activity triggered an unprecedented crisis in the tourism sector;

(b) as part of the short-term relief measures to support the tourism sector, the Department of Tourism, with the approval of the National Treasury, introduced the Tourism Relief Fund to provide once-off capped grant assistance to eligible small micro and medium sized enterprises in the tourism value chain to ensure their sustainability during and post the implementation of government measures to curb the spread of CoVID-19 in South Africa. Categories eligible to apply for the Tourism Relief Fund include, accommodation establishments, hospitality and related services, travel and related services. The Fund has been launched in collaboration with the Department of Tourism, South African Tourism (SAT) and the Tourism Business Council of South Africa (TBCSA) through a 50:50 co-financing arrangement. To this end, the Department of Tourism has contributed R100million, while SAT/TBCSA contributed the remaining R100 million used to capitalise the Fund. The R200 million funding facility is administered by SAT, using a qualification criteria and selection process set by the Department of Tourism. Beneficiaries of the fund are geographically spread across the nine provinces; and

(c) to support the recovery of the tourism sector, the Tourism Relief Fund may be extended as part of upscaled measures expected to be detailed in a tourism sector recovery plan currently being developed by the Department of Tourism.

(ii) The South African Tourism carries out tourism marketing activities both domestic and international, with many countries going into lockdown and implementing stringent measures to curtail the spread of the CoVID-19 virus globally, the marketing activities of the entity have been significantly scaled down in the immediate, short term. Currently, domestic and international travel as well as interprovincial movement remains prohibited except for people that are travelling for the purposes of work or under specific provisions stipulated in the legislation.According to the Tourism Business Council of South Africa, the domestic tourism industry is only expected to pick up activity in September 2020 due to the gradual easing of regulation on domestic and international travel. Even with that, tourism is only expected to regain about 50 per cent of the pre-CoVID-19 activity levels. This in large will also depend on the trajectory of the pandemic. For the moment, the entity will not be able to spend a significant portion of their allocated budget for 2020/21. To this end, during the recent tabling of the 2020 Special Adjustment Budget, allocations to the South African Tourism had been adjusted downward from R1.304billion toR438.306million for 2020/21 fiscal year. In addition, R134 million has been suspended from among others, the tourism incentive programme, destination development and tourism sector support services, bring the total reduction to R1 billion for 2020/21 fiscal year.

(iii) In funding some of the stimulus package, government committed to redirect R130 billion within the current budget. As such, departments were required to identify programmes/activities that could be temporarily suspended without negatively affecting the longevity of those programmes. In this respect, government was able to free up R109 billion from the 2020/21 Budget by removing underspent funds, delaying some departmental projects to 2021/22, and by suspending allocations to programmes with a history of poor performance.

2. Guided by the Tourism Sector Recovery Plan currently being developed by the Department of Tourism, the National Treasury will need to consider the fiscal implications of the plan for the 2020 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement and their possible inclusion in the tabling of additional budget adjustments at the time.

15 September 2020 - NW1688

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Opperman, Ms G to ask the Minister of Finance

Which municipalities, including metros, have had salary increases that were above the inflation rate in each of the past three municipal financial years?

Reply:

Over the past three financial years two salary and wage collective agreements wereconcluded at the South African Local Government Bargaining Council (SALGBC). These collective agreements were effective for the periods, 1 July 2017 to 30 June 2021 (2017/18 to 2020/21 financial years). The terms of the agreements are applicable to all grades of municipalities and affect all employees who fall within the scope of the SALGBC. However, Municipal Managers and those employees appointed as managers directly accountable to Municipal Managers in terms of Sections 54A, Section 56 and Section 57 of the Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000, as amended, are excluded from all the terms of these collective agreements.

The below table link indicates the salary increases as per the salary and wage collective agreements applicable to the past three financial years.

https://pmg.org.za/files/RNW1688Table.pdf

 

15 September 2020 - NW1768

Profile picture: George, Dr DT

George, Dr DT to ask the Minister of Finance

With regard to the assets of deregistered pension funds, what (a) total amount of unclaimed benefit funds is held, (b) steps are being taken to trace and pay beneficiaries and (c) total number of beneficiaries have been traced and paid since January 2017?

Reply:

The Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) has informed the National Treasury that deregistered retirement funds should generally not have any unclaimed benefits.Prior to the liquidation of a fund or exemption from liquidation, these benefits are transferred to unclaimed benefit funds. If there are no unclaimed benefit funds that are willing to accept these benefits, the unclaimed benefits are paid to the Guardians Fund.

The FSCA has also pointed out thatsome retirement funds with assets were erroneously deregistered by their administrators, as part of a consolidation exercise. These funds have been or are in the process of being reinstated, as is the case when such errors are identified, and to ensure no loss to any members who have not been paid out. If the question is directed at ascertaining the amounts of unclaimed benefits in respect of these funds, unfortunately, the FSCA does not have these statistics. Further, the administrators are currently undertaking investigations on which funds have assets and wereerroneously deregistered. The administratorswould, therefore, likely not be in a position to knowthe value of these unclaimed benefits at this stagegiven that theirprocesses arestillunderway.

15 September 2020 - NW645

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Lees, Mr RA to ask the Minister of Finance

(1)Whether, with reference to the reply of the Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure to written question 304 on 19 March 2020, the authority given to the Property Management Trading Entity to open a bank account expires; if not, why not; if so, on what date; (2) whether the authority granted to the Property Management Trading Entity to open a bank account authorises the specified entity to operate an overdraft in the current account it has with the SA Reserve Bank; if not, why not; (3) whether the overdraft and/or negative balance of the Property Management Trading Entity with the SA Reserve Bank is backed up with any security such as a government guarantee; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so what are the details of sure security and/or collateral?

Reply:

1. No. It is a Paymaster - General account which is held at the South African Reserve Bank in terms of Treasury Regulation 15.2.1. The Paymaster - General account is the bank account operated by the particular government department or entity. This bank account will reflect all amounts received and paid by the particular government department or entity.

2. The net position of all the Paymaster-General accounts are funded to zero on a daily basis.

3. No. See (2) above.

15 September 2020 - NW1886

Profile picture: Ndlozi, Dr MQ

Ndlozi, Dr MQ to ask the Minister of Finance

What are the reasons that the National Treasury has not presented the Report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of Impropriety at the Public Investment Corporation to Parliament despite repeated commitments to brief Parliament?

Reply:

The National Treasury and Public Investment Corporation are still in the process of studying the Mpati Commission Report and developing an implementation plan in terms of the recommendations. In addition, due to the global pandemic, there has been a delay with the necessary consultations that need to take place prior to presenting the matter to the Parliamentary Committee.

15 September 2020 - NW1898

Profile picture: Wessels, Mr W

Wessels, Mr W to ask the Minister of Finance

Whether any of the recommendations by the Mpati Commission of Inquiry into allegations of impropriety at the Public Investment Corporation have been implemented; if not, why not; if so, which of the recommendations have been implemented; (2) whether there is a time frame regarding the implementation of all the recommendations contained in the commission's report; if not, why not; if so, what are the relevant details; (3) whether he will make a statement on the matter?

Reply:

1. Currently the Public Investment Corporation and the National Treasury are in the process of developing an implementation plan on the report’s recommendations. Once the implementation plan is finalised, I will be in a position to provide clarity on the implementation of the recommendations.

2. The time frames regarding the implementation of the recommendations of the Mpati Commission of Inquiry will be finalised and outlined in the implementation plan taking into accountconsultations between the National Treasury and the Public Investment Corporation after which the implementation plan and the timelines will be shared with the relevant stakeholders.

3. An update will be provided to all relevant stakeholders at the appropriate time once all the processes have been concluded in this regard.

15 September 2020 - NW1960

Profile picture: Thembekwayo, Dr S

Thembekwayo, Dr S to ask the Minister of Human Settlements, Water and Sanitation

Whether her department has investigated cases of old people’s houses that are allegedly getting sold off without their consent to make way for businesses in Phomolong, Orlando West; if not, what is the position in this regard; if so, what actions will her department take to ensure that no one is illicitly deprived of their house to make way for businesses in the specified area?

Reply:

The Gauteng Provincial Department of Human Settlements reported that it had not received reports of the alleged selling of houses belonging to the aged in Pholomong, Orlando West to make way for the operation of businesses in the area.

The selling of any houses without the consent of the owner is illegal. I would, therefore, encourage the Honourable Member to report this to the law enforcement agencies or provide evidence of illegal selling of houses to my department for investigation. Alternatively, the Honourable Member could give me details of these misdemeanours, I would like to look into the matter as I am familiar with the area.