Mmegi

‘Fake’ drugs: A matter of life, truth and accountability

Allegations that fake drugs may have been administered to children and patients strike at the very core of public trust. Health is not a political football, rather it is the foundation upon which lives, families and the nation itself depend.

When claims of such gravity are made, especially by a sitting Assistant Minister they cannot be brushed aside, delayed, or treated as routine political noise. Even the Ombudsman has confirmed receipt of a report from a political party and a review of these complaints is now underway. That is a necessary first step. But it is only the beginning. The seriousness of the allegations demands urgency, transparency and clarity. The public is entitled to ask: why are these claims surfacing now? If there was credible information, why was it not raised earlier through appropriate channels? And if this is newly discovered information, what immediate measures are in place to protect patients by the government?

Equally troubling is the silence from the Ministry of Health. In moments such as this, silence breeds suspicion. The Ministry owes Batswana reassurances that safeguards are functioning, procurement systems are sound, and patient welfare remains paramount. A simple, clear communication outlining what is known, what is being investigated, and what protections are in place would go a long way in calming public anxiety. There are two possibilities. If the allegations prove unfounded, then a reckless claim of this magnitude would carry serious political consequences for Ignatius Moswaane who raised the alarm. Raising alarm over children and patients allegedly receiving fake medication for political mileage would be an abuse of public trust. Such conduct would demand accountability, as it undermines confidence in critical health institutions and spreads fear amongst vulnerable citizens. On the other hand, if the allegations are substantiated, the implications are even more profound. It would expose a systemic failure within the Ministry of Health and possibly beyond. It would suggest that oversight mechanisms collapsed, procurement processes were compromised, and lives were gambled with in pursuit of profit or through gross negligence.

Editor's Comment
Bravo BDF for the first step addressing GBV

The statement, whilst some may say, comes a little bit too late, is timely as gender-based violence (GBV) continues to haunt the country. A week hardly passes without reports of a wife, a girlfriend or boyfriend being killed by their intimate partners. Just recently, a high-ranking officer stationed at Glen Valley Barracks reportedly murdered his wife and has so far managed to evade arrest. It is also alleged that another soldier murdered his...

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