The COVID-19 pandemic created the perfect conditions for procurement corruption on a scale never before seen in South Africa. When President Ramaphosa declared a national state of disaster on 15 March 2020, emergency procurement provisions were activated across all spheres of government. These provisions — designed for genuine crises — allowed officials to bypass normal competitive bidding processes.
**The R500 Billion Opportunity**
The government committed approximately R500 billion in COVID-19 relief spending from April 2020, including R147.4 billion through the supplementary budget of June 2020. Total COVID-related expenditure from April 2020 to June 2021 reached R138.8 billion. This vast pool of money, flowing through weakened procurement controls, attracted every form of corruption in the state's repertoire.
**Proclamation R23 of 2020**
On 23 July 2020, President Ramaphosa signed Presidential Proclamation R23, authorising the SIU to investigate all COVID-19 related procurement across every state institution. The scope was extraordinary: any procurement that was not fair, competitive, or transparent, and any conduct by officials contravening legislation or regulations. It became the largest single investigation in SIU history.
**The Scale of Irregularity**
The SIU's January 2022 report to the President revealed the devastation: - **5,467 contracts** from **3,066 service providers** investigated, worth **R14.3 billion** - **2,803 contracts** (62%) found irregular, worth **R8.9 billion** - PPE items priced at **double to five times** prescribed rates - Suppliers not registered on the Central Supplier Database awarded contracts - Emergency deviations approved without proper delegation authority - Companies with no medical supply experience receiving multi-million-rand contracts - Politically connected individuals and family members of officials benefiting
**The Auditor-General's Findings**
The AG published three special COVID reports (2020-2021), covering R147B of the relief package: - COVID funds "landed in a weak control environment" - Field hospitals: R4.8B allocated for 66 hospitals, only **18 completed** - Quarantine sites: 6,123 targeted, only **510 identified**, only **192 activated** - Municipalities received R14B but could not produce records to support spending - R3.4B in incorrect UIF disbursements recovered after first report
**The Accountability Gap**
The SIU's referral numbers sound impressive but mask a devastating enforcement failure: - **386 referrals** to NPA for criminal prosecution — resulting in a handful of convictions - **224 referrals** for disciplinary action — outcomes unclear for most - **509 individuals/companies** referred for blacklisting — only **18** actually placed on Treasury's Restricted Suppliers list as of December 2025 - **R551.5 million** marked for recovery — only **R34.2 million** actually recovered by January 2022
The Special Tribunal has been more effective, delivering 41 judgments in 2025 (R1.8B in value), up from 20 in 2024 and 22 in 2023. But the ratio of investigation to prosecution to conviction remains catastrophic.
**The Pattern**
COVID-19 procurement corruption was not a new type of crime — it was the existing procurement corruption infrastructure operating at emergency speed and scale. The same patterns visible in peacetime tender fraud — political connections, inflated prices, shell companies, kickbacks — simply operated without the already-weak controls that normally constrain them.
The pandemic proved, definitively, that South Africa's procurement system is not merely inefficient — it is a mechanism for systematic wealth extraction from the public.