BEFORE THE APPEALS PANEL OF THE PRESS COUNCIL
In the matter between:
City Press Applicant
and
National Health Laboratory Services Respondent
DECISION ON AN APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
“The report
4. The report outlies elements of an alleged crisis at the NHLS. The key claims are:
4.1 that R282m was paid to a Chinese company for Covid testing materials and equipment that were never delivered;
4.2 that the NHLS CEO, Karmani Chetty, bought 60 Mercedes Sprinter buses for use as mobile clinics without planning for the necessary resources. The report claims she equipped them from existing laboratories, and that almost all of them are now standing unused;
4.3 that Chetty protected a senior manager against disciplinary consequences after millions were fraudulently diverted into an improper account; and that
4.4 two managers were improperly appointed ………
“5. Prof Buch (of the respondent) complains that City Press breached (clauses) 1.1, 1.2 and 10.1 of the Press Code. Though not mentioned at the outset, clause 1.8 requiring allegations to be put to the subject of a report for comment, comes up prominently in the complaint”.
The Deputy Press Ombud then dealt in detail with each complaint as briefly set out below – to which I add my own observations where necessary.
The Ruling upheld this complaint. It noted, correctly, that the term “crisis” is a strong one; it would require a widespread dysfunction of the institution. In my view, while there were no doubt some challenges, some of them serious, I am not inclined to think that the Ruling was wrong to say the term “crisis” was too strong. I do not think that the report produces proof that the core functionality of the laboratory was paralysed. The Ruling was correct to say that only a brief reference was made to forensic services (the core function) and then only in very generalized and speculative statements.
The main elements of this complaint are that, firstly, the manager was shielded in relation to the fact that money was irregularly paid out; whereas the respondent’s version is that the manager was ill and later resigned. There is certainly some suspicion about whether the manager was genuinely ill or avoided accountability. The story could have, for example, said that there were some health issues, or even alleged health issues, which prevented action against the manager concerned. The second element is the issue of the “missing R22m”. The Ruling says the story should have mentioned that some R21m was recovered, with the remaining R1m paid out by the insurance company. This information was material to the issue of the “missing R22m”; (own emphasis). This would have indicated that steps were taken to recover the money and therefore that it was not “missing”. In my view, the complaint was correctly upheld.
The respondent says the recruitment was done in a procedural manner. The applicant said they were questionable and said its information was corroborated but, as the Ruling says, does not say how. It finds the reporting confusing. Of course, if the report had indicated in what manner the allegation was corroborated without disclosing its sources, the respondent would have been able to respond. Under those circumstances, the Ruling cannot be faulted.
The Ruling sets out several respects where the applicant failed to seek comment, for example, about the issue of “devastating effects” on the organisation and about the plan for the use of the mobile clinics post-Covid. Looking at the respondent’s response, it appears that it had some responses worth reporting; for example, one of the complaints raised by the respondent was that, had the applicant asked it about the alleged purchase of “equipment” from China, applicant would have been told that it was “reagents” that were bought, and not “equipment”. The Deputy Ombud says that he does not believe that the “newspaper’s confusion between reagents and equipment is serious enough to warrant a finding that it (applicant) failed to ask for comment on this point”. With respect, I think the Ruling has been too generous to the applicant, particularly as the Ruling continues to say, “there is undoubtedly a clear difference between the two”. I do not think that the respondent should have been expected to speak to “equipment” whereas it was asked about “reagents”. It follows I would have upheld this aspect of the complaint as well; for the rest I agree with the Ruling that they should have been put to the respondent.
Dated this 24th day of July 2023.
Judge B M Ngoepe, Chairperson, Appeals Panel