Photo: Laura Lopez Gonzalez/IRIN. Corruption has diverted funds from already under-funded health facilities
Source: IRIN
LILONGWE, 24 October 2013 (IRIN) - Extensive looting of public funds by
government officials in Malawi has dangerously undermined the country’s
public health sector, with hundreds of public health workers striking in
recent weeks to protest late payments of their September salaries.
The delays were the result of a financial scandal involving government
officials who exploited loopholes in a government payment system to make
fraudulent deposits into the accounts of companies that did not have
government contracts. Up to 20 billion kwacha (US$5.3 million) was
siphoned from public funds, according to the Financial Intelligence
Unit, a government organ.
The health worker strike, which started in early October, crippled
operations at public hospitals, which are also experiencing depleted
budgets for essential medical equipment and drugs.
“My three-year-old daughter had a fever, and I went to our district
hospital to seek medical attention, but I came back without any. I found
the staff at the hospital just lying around,” said Laurine Mwangupili
of Karonga District, in Malawi’s Northern Region. “They told us that
they could not attend to patients because they had not been paid their
salaries.”
A health worker at the hospital, who did not wish to be named, said all
the facility’s technical staff - including nurses, clinical officers and
medical assistants - participated in the strike.
Workers at the country’s two largest referral hospitals - Kamuzu Central
Hospital in Lilongwe and Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital in Blantyre -
and at Dedza and Salima district hospitals also went on strike after
the salary delays. They said they would be willing to strike again if
this month’s salaries are delayed.
Striking workers who IRIN spoke to said that they had been threatened
with eviction from their homes because they could not pay their rent.
Some teachers also experienced delays in their September salaries as a
result of the scandal.
“Crippled” because of corruption
Martha Kwataine, executive director of the NGO Malawi Health Equity
Network, raised the alarm over the effect of corruption on the already
underfunded health sector earlier this year.
“We have been saying that the health sector in this country is being
crippled because of corruption,” Kwataine told IRIN. “As a country, we
cannot retain specialist medical personnel because we lose our money
this way. As a result, we keep sending patients to countries like
Tanzania to receive specialized treatment” for diseases like cancer.
She added that the issue of corruption went beyond the late payment of
salaries, and that it was exacerbating shortages of essential medical
supplies, including drugs, which are “currently lacking in a number of
hospitals.”
The Medical Doctors Union of Malawi also protested the looting in a
statement, noting: “It is disheartening and utterly frustrating that
while government is struggling to ensure constant availability of
essential medicines and supplies in public hospitals, largely due to
inadequate funds, some individuals within the same public service are
finding it so easy to access the same inadequate funds for their own
personal benefits.”
In September, IRIN witnessed patients at Nkhata Bay District Hospital
being served a thin porridge instead of the usual meals of ‘nsima’ (a
thick maize-meal porridge) or rice. Hospital authorities said the change
was a result of poor funding to the facility, which had worsened since
August.
Donors react
The impacts of the high-level fraud, which local media are calling
“Cashgate”, are likely to be felt for months to come as international
donors, who make up 40 percent of Malawi’s national budget and are
particularly important to the health sector, threaten to pull out of the
country.
Norway has already suspended its aid, while Germany has urged the
government to track down those responsible, and the European Union (EU)
has threatened to withhold
$39 million of aid in December unless the corruption allegations are
dealt with. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced on Monday that it is withholding $20 million in extended credit facility to Malawi until December.
Since Malawi’s Anti- Corruption Bureau uncovered the scam in early
September, the government has shut down the payment system used to carry
out the fraud, and 10 government officials have been arrested on
charges of money laundering. On 10 October, President Joyce Banda
dissolved her entire cabinet. Most of her 32-member cabinet was
reappointed, with the exception of the ministers of finance, justice,
and industry and trade.
History of corruption
Corruption has been a chronic problem
in Malawi, with each of the country’s previous presidents pledging to
root it out only to be connected to corruption after leaving office.
The first president elected in multiparty polls in 1994, Bakili Muluzi,
is currently answering charges of diverting 1.7 billion kwacha ($4.5
million) of donor money into his own pocket. His successor, Bingu wa
Mutharika, has been posthumously accused of building a 61 billion kwacha
($163 million) estate during the eight years he ruled the country. Most
of that money is suspected to have been looted from state coffers, as
he declared just 136 million kwacha ($363,000) in assets when he assumed
office in 2004.
Under Mutharika, Malawi also had an uneasy relationship with its donors. In 2011, the UK froze its aid to the country after a diplomatic spat.
Since assuming office in April 2012, Banda has worked hard to mend
relations with donors, but these gains may now have been lost.