Benjamin "Benny" Malakoane is a South African politician and medical doctor who served in the Free State Executive Council from 2004 to 2005 and from 2013 to 2019. A member of the African National Congress (ANC), he dropped out of the Executive Council after failing to gain re-election to the Free State Provincial Legislature in the 2019 general election.
Malakoane was best known for his tenure as Member of the Executive Council (MEC) for Health from 2013 to 2016, in which capacity he faced continuous opposition from the Treatment Action Campaign. Between 2013 and 2018, he also faced criminal charges in connection with alleged procurement corruption at Matjhabeng Local Municipality, where Malakoane served as municipal manager from 2007 to 2010 during a hiatus from legislative politics.
He did not serve out the remainder of the legislative term as an ordinary Member of the Provincial Legislature: instead, in 2007, he left the provincial legislature to become municipal manager at Matjhabeng Local Municipality.
Weeks after his appointment as MEC, on 10 July 2013, Malakoane was arrested at his home by the Hawks. He and several others were charged with corruption, fraud, and money laundering in connection with public contracts awarded irregularly at Matjhabeng Local Municipality between 2007 and 2010, while Malakoane had been municipal manager. He and his co-accused – who included Malakoane's fellow MEC Mathabo Leeto – were alleged to have accepted about R13-million in illegal kickbacks in connection with the contracts. He was released on bail and trialled in the Welkom and Bloemfontein Regional Courts. The charges against him were ultimately dropped, but not until July 2018.
With the charges against him pending, Malakoane was elected to a full term in the provincial legislature in the 2014 general election; he was ranked 17th on the ANC's provincial party list. After the election, Magashule announced that Malakoane would continue as MEC for Health in the new legislative term. However, Malakoane faced a sustained public campaign – led by the Treatment Action Campaign, an influential health lobby group – in support of calls to #FireBenny. In addition to the corruption charges against him, the Treatment Action Campaign alleged that Malakoane had unfairly intervened to secure an intensive-care bed for a politically connected patient, at the expense of other patients – an allegation which Malakoane denied. The Treatment Action Campaign also claimed that unlawful stem cell trials had been conducted in the Free State with Malakoane's full knowledge.
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