The Solidarity Fund, set up to combat Covid-19 in South Africa, will be using R327 million it received in donations towards the country’s bid to receive the vaccine.
This was announced by the fund’s newly appointed chief executive officer (CEO) Thandi Nzimande.
According to Nzimande, the money would be used as part payment needed to join the global Covax programme in which countries were bidding to become among the first to receive the vaccine. The R327 million would amount to 15% of the total cost of getting vaccine doses for six million people (10% of the population).
The R3.1 billion fund was established by President Cyril Ramaphosa in March in order to pool resources from the private and public sectors towards the country’s efforts to fight the pandemic. To date, the fund had 14,487 individual donors and 2523 corporate donors.
On Wednesday, Auditor-General Tsakani Maluleke released a second report into the government’s management of Covid-19 funds, showing indications of possible fraud and corruption, mismanagement, and wasteful expenditure.
Responding to this, the fund’s deputy chairperson Adrian Enthoven explained that the fund operated separately from the government and that it had nothing to do with the misappropriated funds mentioned in the report.
Referring to the fund’s own finances, Enthoven said he was confident that no money had been stolen from the fund, stressing that “enormous diligence was applied” to the point that it often delayed certain decisions which had to be made.
According to the fund, gender-based violence and food insecurity were the biggest issues it had to respond to in the 300,000 households it managed to reach this year. R117 million of the R120 million allocated for food distribution had been used by September this year.
-The Citizen
In other news – Actress Sonia Mbele reveals juicy secrets about her ex-hubby who made her quit job over Menzi Ngubane
Phat Joe’s Cheeky Palate tackles many of societal stigmas and pokes into conversations that many, even his guests, always try to avoid.
Who better than Phat Joe, a man marred with many controversies, to stir up these type of conversations that often raise an eyebrow or two. His latest guests were Skeem Saam actor Cedric Fourie, Joe Kazadi, actress Sonia Mbele, and psychologist Buyisile Mncina. Learn More
The post Solidarity Fund makes R327 million down payment in race for vaccine first appeared on News365.co.za.
No comments:
Post a Comment