
Reports of R18m found in safe in KZN house fake news, Saps says
The South African Police Service (Saps) says reports of R18 million found in a safe in a house in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) are fake news.
A post shared on a social media platform on Wednesday claimed that the money was found by the National Intervention Unit (NIU).
'The National Intervention Unit (NIU) has raided Dudu Myeni's house and allegedly found R18 million in a safe. The house now belongs to Thalente Myeni, the son,' the post read.
Fake news
Police spokesperson Brigadier Athlenda Mathe said the post on X is fake news.
'The South African Police Service warns against the spread of fake news about an Saps National Intervention Unit (NIU) raid in which R18 million was found in a safe at a house in Richards Bay, KwaZulu-Natal.'
ALSO READ: Chief Justice Mandisa Maya impersonated on social media
Responsible reporting
Mathe has called for responsible social media reporting and for users to verify information first before sharing.
'The Saps, therefore, confirms no raid was undertaken by any of its units, more so the National Intervention Unit (NIU),' Mathe said.
Fake Mkhwanazi account
Last week, several social media accounts purporting to be KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Provincial Commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi surfaced on X, following explosive allegations of political interference in police operations by Police Minister Senzo Mchunu and Deputy National Commissioner for Crime Detection, Shadrack Sibiya.
Since Mkhwanazi made the allegations, several fake accounts have appeared on social media, particularly on X, TikTok and Facebook, using the names and photographs of the top cop.
Legal action
KZN police spokesperson Colonel Robert Netshiunda said they have taken note of the fake social media accounts.
'Police in KwaZulu-Natal would like to inform the public that Lieutenant General Mkhwanazi does not have a social media account, and declare that all social media accounts bearing his name and photographs are fake. They are being used to deceive the public into believing that it is the provincial commissioner communicating via such platforms.
'Although police are contemplating taking legal steps against those who impersonate the provincial commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal to advance their personal agendas, the public is hereby informed that those profiles are fake and that neither the police in KwaZulu-Natal nor the provincial commissioner have endorsed such fake accounts,' Netshiunda said.
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Eyewitness News
10 hours ago
- Eyewitness News
Police inquiry: The uniform is compromised and so is the response
Charles Matseke 30 July 2025 | 8:45 Police Crisis South African Police Service (SAPS) Police inquiry President Cyril Ramaphosa. Picture: Katlego Jiyane/Eyewitness News South Africans, brace yourselves for yet another commission of inquiry. What an expensive way to insult the intelligence of a nation, spending millions of rands to determine whether a corrupt official is guilty or GUILTY. It's less about truth-finding and more about time-buying. Commissions in South Africa have become like national holidays for the political elite: long, ceremonial, and designed to postpone any real work. The latest trigger? KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Lieutenant-General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi's explosive public revelation that law enforcement operations are being sabotaged from within by fellow officers, no less. While his comments stopped short of naming names, the message was unmistakable: South Africa's criminal underworld no longer hides in the shadows. It has infiltrated the uniforms, taken over the SAPS headquarters, and embedded itself deep within the state. What followed was predictable: media frenzy, political shock, and subsequently, a commission of inquiry. The public reaction will be equally predictable. People will swing between hysteria and euphoria, cheering every televised cross-examination, every defiant soundbite, every leaked document. There will be hashtags, slogans, and maybe even a few heroic headlines. But beneath the surface, a darker truth simmers: South Africans no longer trust the state to act on any of it. In a time of high populism and institutional decay, commissions of inquiry have become national therapy sessions and emotional safety valves for a public that no longer believes in the rule of law. They absorb rage and release nothing. Mkhwanazi didn't merely raise concerns, he detonated a truth bomb that confirms what South Africans have long suspected. The rot in our security agencies is not incidental. It's institutional. And yet, what will be our national response? Another round of breathless headlines, another parade of 'we'll look into it' soundbites, and inevitably, another inquiry. South Africans have watched this movie before. We know the lines. We know how it ends; it ends with Nothing. The tragedy here is not just that Mkhwanazi had to be so cautious, so cryptic, so calculated. The tragedy is that he had to speak at all. His vague-but-volcanic statement signals how broken the chain of command has become. In a country where whistleblowers are murdered and truth-tellers become liabilities, his very act of speaking was both rebellion and self-preservation. He told enough truth to spark national alarm, but not so much as to guarantee professional suicide or personal danger (arguably). In doing so, he exposed more than corruption. He exposed the architecture of a bureaucratically managed mafia state. We've seen the blueprints before. From Jackie Selebi's fall from SAPS Commissioner to convicted felon, to the infamous 2013 Gupta jet landing at Waterkloof Air Force Base, South Africa's security cluster has long operated like a gated estate for elites and their criminal partners. Mkhwanazi's disclosure is simply the latest reminder that the house is not only burning, it may already be under new, unofficial management, and still, we cling to commissions. Remember the Zondo Commission? Four years. Over R1 billion spent. A 5,000-page record of grand corruption. And yet, as Justice Raymond Zondo himself now admits, the state lacks both the political will and prosecutorial muscle to enforce its recommendations. Before that, we had the TRC—truth without recently, the Life Esidimeni hearings confirmed the deaths of over 140 vulnerable patients in state care, yet no one has truly been held accountable. We seem adept at staging national confessions, but allergic to justice. So, we must ask: Are these commissions meant to uncover wrongdoing, or to manage public outrage? Are they catharsis or cover-up? Malcolm Gladwell, in David and Goliath, teaches us that underdogs win not by following the rules, but by bending them. Mkhwanazi's decision to break rank wasn't heroic in the traditional sense, it was strategic. He understands the terrain. In South Africa, speaking the whole truth can be fatal. So, he gave us just enough. Enough to remind us that the rot isn't just at the periphery, it's at the core. But here's the real danger: in our national story, Goliath almost never loses. The system isn't merely resistant to change, it actively absorbs opposition. It consumes whistleblowers, isolates reformers, and rewards silence. Unless the revelation is backed by elite rivalry or sustained public pressure, the status quo remains untouched. We saw this play out with President Cyril Ramaphosa's selective sense of accountability. Ramaphosa's removal of Dr Nobuhle Nkabane, accused of lying to parliament over senior appointments in the country's training sector. But when it comes to Senzo Mchunu, Ramaphosa's close ally and co-accused in damning corruption allegations, the president adopts monk-like restraint. The hypocrisy is staggering. It's Animal Farm in real time, some comrades are more equal than others. This is the essence of cartel logic. Loyalty trumps legality. Power protects itself. And the law? That's just for the opposition or the poor. Even the SAPS and SAND institutions that should serve as bulwarks against criminality, now stand accused of being complicit. There are whispers (some louder than others) of Hawks investigators being intimidated, even assassinated, allegedly by forces within the state's own military structures. If true, this is no longer corruption, it is treason wearing camouflage. In such a context, vagueness becomes a strategy for survival. Mkhwanazi didn't name names because names come with consequences. He gave South Africa a glimpse, enough to jolt us out of apathy, but not enough to get himself targeted. In a state where truth-telling is dangerous, silence isn't cowardice. It's a calculated protest. If history is any guide, we'll let the political class drag us through another round of commissions, statements, and policy documents that say a lot but change nothing. But perhaps this time we should break the script. Perhaps the public must finally demand more than rhetorical justice. Real investigations. Real arrests. Real jail time. Not just for scapegoats and side characters,but for the architects and beneficiaries of state-enabled criminality. Because let's face it: South Africa doesn't just risk becoming a mafia state. It may already be rehearsing the role. And if we don't act soon, we won't need a commission to tell us who's guilty.


The Citizen
15 hours ago
- The Citizen
Madlanga inquiry: Probe into Mkhwanazi's allegations to cost R147.9m
KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) Police Commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi will be the first to be consulted. Acting Deputy Chief Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga's inquiry into KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) police chief Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi's allegations of criminal infiltration into the South African justice system is expected to cost taxpayers an estimated R147.9 million. This was revealed to The Citizen by the department of Justice and Constitutional Development spokesperson Terence Manase on Tuesday. 'Regarding your specific inquiry, we can confirm that the department of Justice and Constitutional Development is responsible for the procurement process for services for the Commission in consultation with the Commission Chairperson and Secretary,' Manase told The Citizen. Millions Manase said that due to the timeframes, the department has applied for a 'deviation from standard procurement processes' with the National Treasury for the Madlanga Commission and 'is awaiting feedback.' 'The estimated budget for the Commission over a six-month period is R147.9 million.' On Monday, Madlanga said his team was treating the bombshell revelations by Mkhwanazi regarding police interference with the urgency they deserve. He outlined the process of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into criminality, political interference and corruption in the criminal justice system at a media briefing in Sandton, which included scheduling Mkhwanazi as the first to be consulted. ALSO READ: 'Ramaphosa will go down in history as one of the most useless presidents' – analyst Judicial commission President Cyril Ramaphosa announced his decision to establish a commission of inquiry to investigate the serious allegations of political interference in police operations made by Mkhwanazi earlier in July. During the briefing, Madlanga also revealed they would meet with Mkhwanazi in the coming days. 'The imminent consultation that I referred to is going to be with Lieutenant General Mkhwanazi. One has no idea what the consultation will lead to.' Allegations Madlanga added that the timeline for the commission of inquiry into criminality, political interference and corruption in the criminal justice system is 'quite tight'. 'Regarding the timeline, we will conduct our work with the timeline in mind. Should the need arise for an extension, that is something we will address at the right time. 'Just looking at the allegations that were made on the 6th of July, they seem to cover quite a wide spectrum and, in consultations and investigations, are likely to yield a lot more than what was referred to in the allegations 6 July. So the timelines, I must say, do appear to be quite tight,' Madlanga said. The commission is expected to deliver a preliminary report in three months and a final report within six months of its formation. ALSO READ: Has government been blue-ticking State Capture report recommendations? Ramaphosa answers

IOL News
16 hours ago
- IOL News
A Winter of Reckoning: Policing, Syndicates, and the Erosion of Command
A SA Police Service (SAPS) officer attempting to stop looting during the unrest that rocked KwaZulu Natal and Gauteng in July 2021. Image: | DOCTOR NGCOBO Independent Newspapers Clyde N.S. Ramalaine South Africa's winter has long echoed historic burdens, most notably the 1976 student uprising and the July 2021 unrest. The latter, labelled an insurrection by the Ramaphosa-led state, served as a politically expedient move, deflecting accountability while exposing racist violence in Phoenix, state brutality, and broken democratic promises. But July 2025 signals a new chapter, marked by exposures, high-level suspensions, and institutional decay, especially within the South African Police Service (SAPS). This 'Winter of Discontent' reveals not just negligence but a disturbing nexus of criminal syndicates, compromised police structures, and political interference. This is about more than corruption; it is about the erosion of command and a nation caught between exposure and accountability. At the centre of this storm is KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi. His explosive 6 July statement shifted public discourse, revealing forensic links between weapons used in several high-profile assassinations, pointing to a coordinated network within the state's security structures. Mkhwanazi's disclosures are grounded in evidence: ballistic matches, arrests, and corroborated results. Weapons recovered in the murder of engineer Armand Swart matched those used in the 2022 assassination of DJ Sumbody and the attempted murder of Tebogo Thobejane. SAPS spokesperson Athlenda Mathe confirmed, 'All these three cases are linked somehow.' Four weapons, including the AK-47 used to kill DJ Sumbody, are now tied to at least 10 high-profile cases. By July 21, four suspects were arrested, including alleged kingpin Katiso 'KT' Molefe and three suspected hitmen: Michael Pule Tau, Tiego Floyd Mabusela, and Musa Kekana. SAPS confirmed the ballistics-linked weapons to at least ten cases, giving credibility to Mkhwanazi's claims and undermining counter-narratives, particularly Minister Senzo Mchunu's initial denials, later followed by admissions. Criticism of Mkhwanazi's motives came from UJ academic Steven Friedman, who suggested the disclosures reflected SAPS factionalism. But dismissing hard evidence as political theatre lacks integrity. Such scepticism risks masking the reality beneath elite commentary. The forensic backing and arrests demand honest reckoning, not theoretical dismissal. Another twist came via former Hawks boss Godfrey Lebeya, who admitted to receiving a tip-off—allegedly from someone linked to Molefe- about a Hawks operation. Lebeya redirected the Hawks, leading to an almost confrontation with SAPS. He has refused to name the caller, citing the pending Madlanga Judicial Commission. But the question remains: why do criminal suspects have such access to top law enforcement, while citizens struggle to report crimes? Equally disconcerting is the role of Brown Mogotsi, a politically connected figure who acted as a conduit between Mchunu and SAPS, despite having no formal position. Once active in North West politics and a vocal CR17 supporter, Mogotsi sent unsolicited WhatsApp directives to Mkhwanazi, claiming to speak for Mchunu. In a Checkpoint interview, he even claimed to be in Tanzania during the arrest of Thabo Bester and Nandipha Magudumana. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Next Stay Close ✕ Mogotsi's ambiguous role, shadowy operative or media-seeking hero, underscores the breakdown of command in SAPS and the alarming closeness between politics and policing. His public activity illustrates political interference cloaked as operational engagement. The allegations surrounding Mchunu and Sibiya suggest obstruction. Mchunu disbanded the Political Killings Task Team (PKTT) investigating political assassinations, while over 120 dockets stalled. Mkhwanazi linked Sibiya to controversial figures, including Mogotsi and murder-accused businessman Vusimusi 'Cat' Matlala, through data from Matlala's cellphone. In Parliament, Mchunu denied knowing Mogotsi, only to later call him 'a comrade.' This contradiction borders on perjury. Moreover, critical dockets were reassigned to Sibiya without SAPS Commissioner Masemola's knowledge, suggesting an attempt to derail investigations. Sibiya has since taken legal action against SAPS for what he calls an unlawful suspension. President Ramaphosa's suspension of Gauteng Director of Public Prosecutions Advocate Andrew Chauke added to the month's turmoil. Is this accountability, or political housekeeping? Does it reflect NDPP Shamila Batohi's past warnings about compromised individuals within the NPA? July brought yet another subplot: Patriotic Alliance (PA) Deputy President Kenny Kunene, who was present at Molefe's arrest. Though uncharged, his presence drew attention. Kunene resigned from his City of Johannesburg post pending an internal party investigation. His background in media ownership, Weekly Xposé, Africa News 24-7, may explain his presence as a search for a scoop. Still, the PA's swift suspension of Kunene contrasts sharply with the ANC's inertia. Mchunu, shielded by executive privilege, remains untouched. In response to Mkhwanazi's disclosures, Ramaphosa announced three critical decisions on 13 July: the formation of a judicial commission, placing Mchunu on leave, and appointing Firoz Cachalia as acting minister. These moves are now under Constitutional Court review, with the uMkhonto we Sizwe Party (MKP) challenging their legality. Should the court side with the MKP and strike down the announcements, the implications would be disruptive. Such a ruling would mark an institutional red card not just for executive overreach, but also against the President's ability to act in crisis. It could provoke a constitutional crisis, weaken the presidency's authority under Section 84, embolden adversaries questioning the legitimacy of state efforts to combat law enforcement capture, and further erode SAPS's fragile command. Worse, it might encourage those implicated to delay accountability under the guise of procedural propriety. The Madlanga Commission may not commence for three months and could take years to conclude. Meanwhile, overlapping investigations from Parliament, the Public Protector, and others have been launched. But are these parallel probes strategically sound, or dangerously duplicative? Witnesses may feel compromised about testifying before the commission begins, fearing political fallout or legal complications. Without coordination, these overlapping inquiries could harm the integrity of the entire process. Justice demands urgency, but also coherence. We've seen this before: Phala Phala produced more noise than resolution. Overlapping mandates, jurisdictional confusion, and political manoeuvring tactics create a fog that allows the guilty to vanish, locked in a sealed status. The more disjointed our accountability processes, the easier they become to manipulate. As July ends, one wonders: Will the judiciary be next? If Mkhwanazi's revelations are accurate, the rot reaches further into the justice system. Is South Africa ready for that confrontation? This winter may not deliver justice, but it has begun a reckoning, driven not by politicians but by a police commissioner with evidence. Mkhwanazi's bravery has shattered the silence. He's shown us a state entangled with criminality, protected by privilege, and nearing institutional collapse. As the Madlanga Commission awaits commencement, the spread of unaligned investigations risks confusion over clarity. Without coherence, justice may again be buried under politics. July 2025 has not answered every question, but it's raised the ones we can no longer ignore. Whether this moment becomes a turning point or deepens the national malaise will depend on what follows. South Africa stands at a precipice, its guardians exposed, its institutions tested, and its people impatient for action. * Clyde N.S. Ramalaine is a theologian, political analyst, lifelong social and economic justice activist, published author, poet, and freelance writer. ** The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of IOL, Independent Media or The African.