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Politics endangers patients with the rise of hospital blockades

Sunday Tribune

|

September 28, 2025

SOUTH Africa is treading on dangerous ground. When hospitals are blockaded, doctors harassed, and mobs spread lies unchecked, we risk slipping from a constitutional democracy into a banana state. What is unfolding in KwaZulu-Natal and increasingly in other provinces is not a protest in the name of justice. It is a reckless assault on public institutions, fuelled by misinformation and political opportunism. The silence of the state, coupled with the failure of the police to act decisively, only emboldens those who thrive on chaos.

The latest crisis centres on our healthcare system, where false claims are spreading that foreign nationals are running hospitals and firing South African nurses.

At Durban's Chief Albert Luthuli Central Hospital, protesters led by the so-called uMkhonto weSizwe Party’s (MKP) Labour Desk blockaded entrances, spreading the outrageous lie that a “foreign nurse” has the power to hire and fire locals. This is nonsense. Employment in public hospitals follows a strict process: posts are advertised internally and externally, applications go through human resources, qualifications are verified, and interviews are conducted by a panel.

Equally, in case of misconduct of an employee, it is handled through warnings, investigations, and disciplinary hearings, with Labour Unit oversight where necessary. No single individual, South African or foreign, can simply wake up and decide who stays or who goes. Protests built on such lies are not free expression; they are a dangerous distortion of reality. Worse, they undermine public confidence in health care at a time when millions depend on its fragile functioning.

The protest at Inkosi Albert Luthuli Hospital is not an isolated incident. It reflects a broader pattern of lawlessness where groups exploit public frustration for narrow agendas. Blocking hospitals is not activism, but it is sabotage. It is not a defence of workers, but it is an attack on the sick, the vulnerable, and the very principle of care. The MKP’s Labour Desk, like other factions seeking relevance, is weaponising lies to remain in the headlines. This is opportunism at its most destructive. Hospitals are sacred spaces, not platforms of propaganda. To gamble with lives in pursuit of politics is unforgivable.

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