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June 6, 2026
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Homeless man dies outside Tshwane hospital

In the latest incident, a homeless man died on the stairs of the Tshwane District hospital on Tuesday night. He had allegedly been refused emergency service because he was “dirty” and stank.

DA Gauteng spokesperson for social development Crezane Bosch, claimed a car guard pleaded for the man to be assisted, but he died after two hours lying outside the hospital, with no staff willing to help him.

“When the SAPS were called, they indicated that they would only arrive after 10 hours to attend to the situation. However, after intervention from the community policing forum, the police arrived after an hour. Meanwhile, the body was lying outside the Tshwane District Hospital.” Said Bosch.

He said there has to be consequences for those in government who failed to assist the homeless in the province.

Provincial health district chief director Mothomone Pitsi said the department was sitting with two different versions as to what took place. He said after speaking to the chief executive of the hospital, his version was that the person never even got to the hospital.

He said the chief executive had informed them that man had died outside the hospital, next to the kiosk. Pitsi said there two car guards who also witnessed the incident, where the man was seen walking into the hospital only to turn back a few minutes later.

“I heard on the radio that he was turned away and there witnesses, so we have tasked an official to help find those witnesses who spoke on air so we can engage and investigate their version of what happened.”

Even though there are cameras at the entrance of the hospital, Pitsi said an official had been tasked to check the government mortuary to get a picture of the dead man to help identify him.

Mamelodi Day Hospital and Stanza Bopape Community Health Centre have also been in the news for poor service delivery.

In this regard, Pitsi said further discussions were being held in order for hospitals to have “vigorous customer service.”

“There needs to be a better way to engage and assist our patients, because we can’t have these incidents cropping up anymore.”

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