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Kannaland’s Crisis is the direct result of ICOSA’s failure to Govern

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Kannaland’s Crisis is the direct result of ICOSA’s failure to Govern


CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS 
ONLINE_EDITOR 



The Democratic Alliance notes with serious concern the continued collapse of governance and service delivery in Kannaland Municipality under the ICOSA-led independent party coalition are robbing residents of their basic rights and dignity.

Council agendas and official reports confirm what residents experience daily: a municipality in constant crisis mode.

The ICOSA-led Kannaland's failure include:

Water shortages have escalated into a declared local state of disaster;

Basic services are sustained through emergency procurement deviations instead of proper planning, while critical infrastructure continues to fail;

Financial management which is in disarray, with an unfunded budget, a Financial Recovery Plan already in place; and



These failures are the consequence of weak political leadership, poor oversight, and an inability of ICOSA and its coalition partners to make hard, responsible governing decisions. Instead of stabilising Kannaland, ICOSA has normalised dysfunction, delayed accountability, and presided over institutional decay.

Residents are paying the price through an unreliable water supply, deteriorating services, and a municipality lurching from one emergency to the next without a credible recovery path.

The Democratic Alliance remains committed to principled governance, financial discipline, and service delivery that works. Kannaland deserves competent leadership that plans, prioritises residents' needs, and restores trust in local government.

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President Cyril Ramaphosa welcomes Madlanga Commission Interim Report

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS 
ONLINE_EDITOR 

President Cyril Ramaphosa welcomes Madlanga Commission Interim Report



This followed serious allegations made by Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi about the existence and operation of a sophisticated criminal syndicate that has allegedly infiltrated the criminal justice system in South Africa. 

The Commission, chaired by retired Constitutional Court Justice Mbuyiseli Madlanga, assisted by Advocate Sesi Baloyi SC and Advocate Sandile Khumalo SC, submitted its interim report on the 17th of December 2025 in line with the delivery timelines that had been determined by the President. 

President Ramaphosa has studied the interim report and accepts its recommendations. 

President Ramaphosa further welcomes the referrals by the Commission of matters for immediate criminal investigation and urgent decisions on prosecution, as well as recommendations on the employment status and recommended suspension of individuals. 

The Commission, in accordance with its terms of reference, makes several referrals concerning matters that require immediate further investigation by the relevant and impacted law enforcement institutions, including criminal investigations. 

The commission also makes recommendations in some instances for disciplinary measures to be taken against individuals alleged to be involved in wrongdoing including criminal acts and corruption. 

Clause 7 of the Commission’s Terms of Reference empowers the Commission to “consider prima facie evidence relating to the involvement of individuals currently employed within law enforcement or intelligence agencies and, where appropriate, the Commission must make recommendations regarding the employment status of such officials including whether they should be suspended pending the outcome of further investigations.” 

Clause 10.4 provides the Commission with the “power to refer matters for immediate criminal investigation and urgent decisions on prosecution, taking into account the nature of the allegations and evidence the Commission will uncover.” 

Clause 12 states that “the Commission shall, where appropriate, refer any matter for prosecution, further investigation or the convening of a separate enquiry to the appropriate law enforcement agency, government department or regulator.” 

President Ramaphosa expects all law enforcement agencies and other relevant criminal justice institutions to act with speed in implementing the recommendations of the Commission’s interim report. Such immediate action will help to restore public trust and strengthen operational capacity in the affected state entities tasked with fighting crime and corruption.

Where the commission has said that there is prima facie evidence of wrongdoing, it has made referrals for investigation by the appropriate officials in the South African Police Service, Independent Police Investigative Directorate or the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality




The referrals relate to the following SAPS officials

Major General Richard Shibiri
Brigadier Mbangwa Nkhwashu
Brigadier Rachel Matjeng
Sergeant Fannie Nkosi


Prima facie evidence of wrongdoing was also found by the Commission with regard to the following current and former employees of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality:

EMPD Officer Bafana Twala
EMPD Officer Aiden McKenzie
EMPD Officer Kershia Leigh Stols
EMM fleet manager/proxy Mr Chris Steyn
EMM Head of Department of Human Resources Ms Linda Gxasheka
EMM Head of Legal Adv Kemi Behari
Mr Etienne van der Walt

The matters highlighted for referral concern allegations of criminality, corruption, fraud, murder, perjury and other unlawful actions by officials and officers in the employ of the South African Police Service, City of Ekurhuleni and the Ekurhuleni Metro Police Department. 

Where IPID is already seized with certain matters, the Commission will make a referral to IPID on the status of their investigations and seek explanations for any delays.

President Ramaphosa has noted that some of the implicated individuals will return to the Commission to respond to allegations presented against them and that more witnesses are yet to deliver their evidence. 

While the Commission emphasises that, with the exception of EMPD Chief, Commissioner Julius Mkhwanazi, it has not yet heard the response of some of the relevant persons listed above, the allegations against them remain prima facie allegations only and are not findings of the Commission. 

The nature of these allegations however warrants the referrals for further investigation and potential disciplinary, prosecutorial or regulatory action right away.

President Ramaphosa has directed the Minister of Police Professor Firoz Cachalia and General Fannie Masemola, the National Commissioner of the South African Police Service to constitute a special investigations task team, with a leader who will report directly to General Masemola. The task team will institute investigations against people identified by the Commission for investigation.

Establishing a special unit is critical to ensure that these investigations take place as a matter of urgency.

President Ramaphosa would like to express his deepest appreciation to the Commission chairperson, retired Justice Madlanga, Commissioners Baloyi and Khumalo and to all the Commission staff for their diligent work in the delivery of the interim report. 

The President looks forward to the finalisation of the Commission’s work and its contribution to the effective functioning of law enforcement agencies and the criminal justice system.

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EFF GAUTENG CONDEMNS THE SUSPENSION OF REA VAYA FEEDER BUSES IN SOWETO

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS 
ONLINE_EDITOR 


EFF GAUTENG CONDEMNS THE SUSPENSION OF REA VAYA FEEDER BUSES IN SOWETO 


The Economic Freedom Fighters Gauteng vehemently rejects the unilateral decision by City of Johannesburg Mayor, Dada Morero, to suspend Rea Vaya feeder buses in Soweto. This ill advised decision, taken without consultation with affected communities and commuter structures, will directly deny the people of Soweto access to safe, affordable and reliable public transport.  



The EFF is profoundly disgusted by this decision, which is clear profit-driven and intended to appease certain taxi associations at the expense of residents who depend on affordable public transport for their daily survival. This situation arises from the failure of political oversight bodies and taxi associations to find a common ground. The unfortunate victims of this misgovernance and poor leadership are ordinary working-class residents who truly need these feeder buses for daily mobility and survival. 

The sitting MMC for Transport, Kenny Kunene, has equally demonstrated gross incompetence and a complete lack of capacity to govern a critical department. Instead of strengthening public transport systems, this office has been reduced to a vehicle for political patronage, corruption, and resource extraction for narrow party interests. 

The EFF  refuses to accept leadership that treats public transport as a private business to quick money rather than a public service. The EFF in Gauteng therefore demands the  immediate reinstatement of all Rea Vaya feeder bus services serving Joburg residents, particularly in Soweto. We also demand a full public consultation process involving commuters, taxi associations, community 

leadership, and transport stakeholders before any future decisions affecting public transport are taken. The City of Johannesburg must establish a permanent Transport Stakeholder Forum for Soweto, including taxi associations, commuter representatives, and municipal officials, to manage route integration and conflict resolution. The JMPD Rea Vaya Safety Unit must be strengthened immediately. 

We welcome engagements with the MMC for Public Safety, Dr Mgcini Tshwaku who has committed to increasing police visibility on feeder bus routes to ensure commuter safety and restore public confidence. The EFF will engage the Gauteng Provincial Department of Transport and the City of Johannesburg to fast-track the issuing and regulation of operating permits for buses, ensuring legality, order, and stability in the sector. 

We will also engage the Soweto Taxi Association to ensure that their role in the township economy is respected, while prioritising the right of residents to safe, efficient, and affordable public transport. At stake is not only transport policy, but the dignity and daily survival of the people. Public transport is a public good, not a bargaining chip for political elites. 

We therefore call on the Mayor and his MMC for Transport to return the buses immediately. Failure to act will be met with intensified community mobilisation and political action. The people of Johannesburg cannot be governed through greed that is coupled with incompetence, arrogance and neglect.


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