Nearly five years and R38-million later, Mamelodi families still don’t have a clinic

The City of Tshwane fired the construction company last year

| By

The Lusaka Clinic in Mamelodi, Tshwane started in 2020, has still not been completed. Photo: Warren Mabona

A R61-million clinic in Mamelodi, Tshwane, started in 2020, is still not ready, though the municipality has spent R38-million on the project.

City of Tshwane spokesperson Lindela Mashigo said construction work on the Lusaka Clinic started in July 2020 and the project was to have been completed at the end of July 2024.

But in August 2024 the City ended the contract with the construction company, Eternity Star Investments 231, because it had failed to meet its obligations.

Mashigo said R38-million had been spent and the clinic was “93%” complete. He said the contract had been terminated after “multiple stoppages” during the contract.

“Construction will resume after the procurement process has been finalised for appointment of a replacement contractor.”

Mashigo said the clinic is a single-storey facebrick building consisting of 21 consulting rooms with three wards.

GroundUp visited Lusaka Clinic and found the gates closed. There were piles of sand and bricks, with weeds growing inside and outside the premises.

Pensioner Emily Mazibuko said her nearest clinic was Stanza Bopape Clinic in Extension 5, about 6km away. “I must wake up early in the morning and travel,” said Mazibuko. She said she spent R30 on a return trip.

“If this clinic were completed and working, I could save this money for bread.”

Almina Ntimbe said she has to take her six-month-old baby to Stanza Bopape often for medical care. “I was happy when they started building this clinic. We live in a nice place with water and electricity. But we don’t have a clinic which is also very important in our lives.”

Asked to explain the delay in construction, Mashigo said there were several reasons, including rain, “community interruptions” and strikes, and “delayed payments that resulted in work stoppages”.

“Lastly, there was poor performance due to poor capital investment in the project by the contractor,” said Mashigo.

Mashigo did not provide further details on what caused the strikes and late payments, and what the payments were for.

GroundUp tried to reach Eternity Star Investments for comment. The Polokwane office referred us to company director Keletso Setagane. We sent him an email and followed up with a call to one of the cellphone numbers listed on the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission website.

When we called, Setagane said: “Can you respect the POPI [Protection of Personal Information] Act? I have never issued my number to anyone else. That is my response.”

Support independent journalism
Donate using Payfast
Snapscan

TOPICS:  Health Local government

Next:  Icebreaker returns from Antarctica with alarming news

Previous:  Judge blocks bequest to white supremacist organisation

© 2025 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.

We put an invisible pixel in the article so that we can count traffic to republishers. All analytics tools are solely on our servers. We do not give our logs to any third party. Logs are deleted after two weeks. We do not use any IP address identifying information except to count regional traffic. We are solely interested in counting hits, not tracking users. If you republish, please do not delete the invisible pixel.