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Minister Buti Manamela gears TVETs for Skills Development system overhaul

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 

Minister Buti Manamela gears TVETs for Skills Development system overhaul

South Africa is moving decisively to reposition TVET colleges at the centre of occupational training and artisan development.
 
Addressing leaders from across the skills system including SETAs, employers, state-owned entities and college principals, the Minister made it clear that the time for policy debate has passed. The focus now is delivery.
 
In the 2026 State of the Nation Address, the President directed government to implement a dual training model that integrates education with workplace experience and strengthens the role of TVET colleges as primary sites of occupational training. The Minister confirmed that this directive is now being operationalised.
 
Occupational qualifications represent a structural shift in vocational education. Unlike previous models that separated theory from workplace exposure, the new approach integrates classroom learning, practical training and real workplace experience into a single, coherent pathway from enrolment to employment. 
 
Minister Manamela emphasised that readiness across the TVET system is uneven but sufficient to begin immediate rollout. Some colleges are ready now in specific trades, while others require targeted support. Waiting for full system perfection would delay opportunities for young people. 
 
Common bottlenecks have been identified across regions, including accreditation delays, insufficient workplace placements, lecturer occupational exposure and equipment alignment. These are systemic issues requiring coordinated action across government, employers and training authorities. 
 
The session was positioned as an implementation forum rather than a traditional workshop. By the end of the engagement, the system was expected to identify priority occupational qualifications for rollout, confirm college readiness, secure workplace placement commitments and align funding accordingly.
 
The Minister stressed that occupational qualifications are not a pilot or add-on programme. They are the future default of vocational education in South Africa.
 
“confidence in the TVET system will not be restored through announcements, but through measurable delivery, accreditation processed on time, learners placed in workplaces, qualifications completed and employment pathways secured” said Minister Manamela
 
The next 90 days will focus on fast-tracking accreditation, confirming placements, aligning funding and enrolling learners in priority trades.

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Keynote address by the National Commissioner of the South African Police Service, General Sf Masemola (SOEG) Special Task Force Badge Parade SAPS Tshwane Academy

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 

Keynote address by the National Commissioner of the South African Police Service, General Sf Masemola (SOEG) Special Task Force Badge Parade SAPS Tshwane Academy 


Programme Director, WO Sekele
The Divisional Commissioner for Visible Policing, Lt Gen Mamothethi;
The Provincial Commissioner of KwaZulu-Natal, Lt Gen Mkhwanazi;
Divisional Commissioner for Crime Intelligence, Lt General Khumalo; 
Retired former Provincial Commissioner for Gauteng
Province, Lt General Mawela; 
Retired Major General Moodley, from the DPCI;
Major General Mdutywa from the SANDF Health Services
All Generals, Brigadiers and Senior Officers of the SAPS present;
Members of the Special Task Force;
The Instructors and Commanders of the Special Task Force;
Members on Parade;
Family and friends of our members on parade;

Good Morning,

Today, on this historic parade ground at the SAPS Tshwane Academy, we stand in the presence of excellence. We gather not merely to confer Wings and Operators Badges, but to recognise those who have chosen the narrow, demanding and honorable path of the Special Task Force; the elite operational unit of the South African Police Service.

This is not an ordinary unit. It is a strategic national asset.

For eighteen months, these members have endured one of the most rigorous and uncompromising training programmes within our law enforcement environment. 

Out of many who began this journey, only a few stand before us today. That reality alone speaks volumes about the calibre of those on parade.

Today, we confer Special Task Force Wings to 13 members and Operators Badges to 16 members. Each Wing and each Badge represents resilience under pressure, mental fortitude under extreme stress, tactical precision under fatigue, and unwavering commitment to the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa.

Members on parade,

You did not arrive here by chance. You earned your place through grit, discipline and sacrifice. You were tested physically, mentally and emotionally. 

You were pushed beyond exhaustion, beyond doubt and beyond fear. The purpose was never to break you; it was to refine you.

And today, you stand refined.

The Wings and Badges you will wear are not decorations. They are a covenant. A covenant to protect life. A covenant to defend the sovereignty of our Republic. A covenant to stand firm where danger is greatest.

As members of this elite capability, you will be deployed in situations where seconds determine outcomes, where precision saves lives, and where failure is not an option. You will confront organised crime syndicates, hostage situations, armed suspects, and high-risk operations that demand absolute professionalism.

In those moments, the nation will rely on your training, your discipline and your judgement.

But remember this: tactical excellence without ethical grounding is dangerous. Your power must always be guided by restraint. Your authority must always be anchored in accountability. You are not above the law but you are its guardians.

The Special Task Force embodies the highest ideals of the SAPS: courage, integrity, service and respect for human dignity. Your conduct, both on and off duty, must reflect these values. The badge on your chest carries the reputation of this entire Service.

To the instructors and commanders,

You carry a profound responsibility. You shape those who will stand between chaos and order. Through uncompromising standards, you ensure that only the most capable earn the honor of this unit. Your leadership ensures that this elite capability remains sharp, disciplined and mission ready. On behalf of the SAPS and the people of South Africa, I thank you.

To the families and loved ones,

Today is your parade as well. Behind every operator stands a family that has endured long absences, uncertainty and sacrifice. 

Your support has been the unseen strength behind every early morning, every demanding drill and every test of endurance. The Republic owes you gratitude.

Members on parade,

As you step forward today, understand that you now form part of a proud legacy ~ a legacy built over decades of operational excellence, sacrifice and bravery. You inherit that legacy, and you are now responsible for strengthening it.

When you deploy, deploy with discipline.

When you act, act with precision.

When you lead, lead with humility.

Let your presence restore confidence. Let your professionalism inspire trust. Let your actions reflect the very best of the South African Police Service.

Go forward knowing that the nation believes in you.

Go forward knowing that the uniform you wear carries the hopes of millions.

Go forward determined to protect our Republic with honour and distinction.

No matter the threat.

No matter the challenge.

No matter the cost.

May you serve with courage, integrity and unwavering commitment to the people of South Africa.

I THANK YOU.

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Acting Minister Firoz Cachalia: Release of the third quarter crime statistics

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 

Acting Minister Firoz Cachalia: Release of the third quarter crime statistics


Deputy Minister of Police, Dr Polly Boshielo,
Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Mr Andries Nel,
National Commissioner of the South African Police Service, General Fannie Masemola,
Acting Deputy National Commissioners present, Lt General Senthumule and Lt General Nkhuoa,
Divisional Commissioners,
Gauteng Provincial Commissioner, Lt General Mthombeni,
Representatives from the Civilian Secretariat for Police Service and IPID and DPCI,
Major General Thulare Sekhukhune,
the SAPS Crime Registrar,
Senior SAPS Managers,
Members of the media,
Ladies and gentlemen,

Good afternoon to you all.

Introduction

Three months ago, on 28 November, I released the crime statistics for the 1st and 2nd quarter of the current financial year from 1 April to 30 September 2025.

Today I will share the results of the 3rd quarter, for the period 1 October to 31 December 2025. The decision to publicly release crime statistics every quarter is a demonstration of this government’s commitment to transparency and accountability.

Our people are entitled to know how many crimes are reported to the South African Police Service (SAPS) on a regular basis, different categories are showing an increase, or decrease in the precincts where communities live.

We share this information so that communities, businesses, and public service departments will have a sense of what is happening in their neighbourhoods in terms of crime and related risks. Knowledge is power and enables better and more effective collective action to improve public safety.

Last week, we heard during the State of the Nation Address, that the President has centered public safety, with a particular focus on tackling organised crime and gender-based violence at the forefront of this government’s agenda in the coming year.

I gave further details as to our approach and what we practically hope to achieve during my speech before parliament as part of the debate on SONA and will reemphasise some of this today, as part of the release of the latest crime statistics.

National Trends

Overall, the sense of cautious optimism in relation to overall national crime trends that I referred to last year remains. Most violent crime categories, including murder, rape, robbery and most property related crimes like theft and burglary continued to decrease, but remain at unacceptably high levels.

After more than a decade of annual increases, murder, our most accurate crime statistic started decreasing on the first quarter of 2023-24. This trend has continued throughout this year with this quarter showing a 8,7 decrease or 602 fewer lives lost.

This means that over the past two years, the numbers of murders for the quarter 3 Period (1 October to 31 December) had dropped by 17,6% or 1 359 fewer murders.

Total contact crime made up of all categories of violent crime started to decrease in the 3rd quarter of 2024-25. During this quarter, total violent crime decreased again by 6,7% or 12 682 fewer cases reported to the SAPS when compared to the same quarter last year. Over the past two years, total violent crime for this quarter is down by 8,3% or 15 763 fewer cases. This trend may well be attributable to enhanced policing operations.

But despite these welcome national trends, the levels of crime remain unacceptably high. The crime situation also varies substantially across the country. Remember that these are statistical, patterns.

While most communities have recorded a decrease in violent and property crimes, there are still too many communities that have recorded increases. This does not necessarily translate into a felt sense of security by individuals, families and communities.

For example, while we have seen double digit reductions in murder in five provinces namely KwaZulu Natal, Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Free State and the North West, much smaller decreases were recorded in the Western and Eastern Cape, with slight increases recorded in Limpopo and the Northern Cape. And out of the 30 highest murder precincts, decreases were recorded in only 15 of them. The killings relating to gang violence in the Eastern and Western Cape in particular, remain worrisomely high.

For this quarter, I am deeply concerned with the notable increase in the murder of police officials. Almost 80% of the 23 police officials who lost their lives were off-duty.

This is an issue that I will ask SAPS management to look into so that we can try and prevent these deaths from happening.

Again, firearms remain the single largest weapon driving murder, robbery and organised crime in our country. As the President noted in his SONA speech, we will be taking additional measures to address this scourge with a focus on removing illegal firearms and preventing legal firearms from falling into the wrong hands.

The classification of Gender Based Violence and Femicide (GBV+F) as a national disaster demands that we intensify our efforts to deal with this. Much inter-personal, domestic and Gender-Based violence takes place between people who live with each other or know each other.

We are taking steps to strengthen the policing approach to addressing GBV+F and other forms of violence. For example, the SAPS has allocated an additional 999 police members to the Detective Services over the past year.

While we work to improve law-enforcement, we also need to give attention to implementing the Integrated Crime and Violence Strategy (ICVPS.) This requires that different social departments such as health, education and social development to align their services across levels of government to mitigate the factors that drive crime and violence so that it can be prevented from happening.

I will be hosting a meeting of all the Provincial Heads of Community Safety, including some Premiers called the MinMec On the 6th of March. This meeting is important to ensure that we align the operations of the National, Provincial and Local governments in implementing the ICVPS in the high-crime precincts across all provinces.

We also need to ensure that communities are supported with their local level programmes to improve public safety. However, this has to be done within the law.

Where communities take the law into their own hands, resulting in murders and assaults, this creates further work for an already overstretched police service.

We will therefore be looking at re-invigorating community-policing by establishing a national community-patroller programme that will run in each province. I have tasked the Civilian Secretariat for Police to develop the concept and funding model, with the objective of enabling community members to receive training and stipends to assist with improving safety in their localities. They will not be undertaking policing functions but be deployed to ensure that there are people who can call the police and through their presence prevent crime from happening in places such as transport nodes, walkways, around schools and other places where there are safety challenges.

Tackling Organised Crime

As the President clearly stated last week, in the SONA last week, “Organised Crime is now the most immediate threat to our democracy, our society and economic development.”

As I have mentioned before, most organised crime is not recorded in the crime statistics. Most extortion of small businesses is not reported to the police nor is most corruption and fraud in the public and public and private sectors will not be found in these statistics.

Nevertheless, the impact of these crimes is real and severely damaging for our country.

When public funds are stolen at a large scale, we feel it in various ways. Local level organised corruption in tendering and the copper cable theft syndicates contribute to water and electricity outages that cause havoc to our lives.

The quality of crucial public services such as education, health care and transport, is undermined when the public funds allocated for these services is stolen. In the private sector, the cost of goods and services increase as private companies charge more to make up for losses in stock or fraud, or incur additional security costs to prevent becoming victims to syndicated crime.

As the Madlanga Commission and Parliamentary Ad Hoc inquiries have shown, organised criminality has infiltrated our criminal justice system. We have already established a dedicated task team to investigate evidence of criminality against senior SAPS and Ekurhuleni local government officials that have been identified by the interim report of the Madlanga Commission as being part of criminal activities.

Our approach towards tackling organised crime needs to rely on two simultaneous approaches:

Firstly, we must identify those involved through vetting and lifestyle audits of our top ranks. Those who fraternise with criminals or involve themselves in criminality and corruption have no place in our criminal justice system. The SAPS top management echelon must consist only of experienced commanders of unquestionable integrity. We must establish an organisational culture characterised by professionalism, integrity and accountability throughout the organisation.

Secondly, organised crime is sophisticated, well-networked and enabled by professional lawyers and accountants. Specialised capabilities for identifying individuals and networks are being strengthened so that we can dismantle their operations, seize their resources and send those implicated to prison.

In the short-term where the effects of organised crime threaten lives and livelihoods such as gang violence and illegal mining, additional security resources will be enhanced by bolstering the Anti-Gang Units, deploying other specialised policing units and the SANDF.

Much attention has been given to the deployment of the SANDF. Many communities are in support of this intervention, but some commentators have expressed concern.

Let me be clear, this deployment is under-the command of the SAPS and in support of their operations in particular locations. Their role has been carefully defined to ensure area dominance and protection during high‑risk operations; support to cordon‑and‑search in dangerous zones; and protection of critical infrastructure and key routes. It is time bound and aimed at stabilising situations where people are losing their lives on a daily basis.

Conclusion

While the national trends for most violent and property crime continue to head in the right direction, crime remains unacceptably high and continues to devastate many lives and communities. We therefore still have a long journey to travel. But, I promise that we will not give up. By adopting a whole of government and whole of society approach, together we can make South Africa a safer place. This is a priority, and is achievable.

I thank you.

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Western Cape Records 1 157 Murders in three Months – averaging 12 Lives lost every day

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CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE_EDITOR 

Western Cape Records 1 157 Murders in three Months – averaging 12 Lives lost every day

The Democratic Alliance (DA) in the Western Cape is deeply concerned and outraged by the latest crime statistics for the period 1 October 2025 to 31 December 2025, which once again confirm that our province remains under siege due to the national government’s ongoing failure to properly resource and capacitate policing in the Western Cape.

During this three-month period, the province recorded 31,399 contact crimes and a staggering 1,157 murders, which equates to an average of 12 murders every single day. In addition, 1,211 attempted murders were reported, representing a 5.43% increase compared to the same period last year, with an average of 13 attempted murders per day. Of grave concern is that 644 murders were committed using firearms, while 713 attempted murders involved firearms.

Gang-related violence continues to traumatise our communities, with 257 murders directly linked to gang activity. A staggering 686 of all murders occurred in public spaces such as streets, open fields, recreational centres, parks, beaches and parking areas, highlighting the brazen nature of criminal activity in our province.

The most affected precincts paint a deeply troubling picture. Mfuleni recorded 75 murders, reflecting a 2.7% increase compared to the same period last year. Nyanga recorded 70 murders, a shocking 29.6% increase year on year. Delft saw 58 murders, followed by Gugulethu with 52, Khayelitsha with 50 and Kraaifontein with 46 murders. These communities continue to carry the heaviest burden of violent crime, while the national government fails to act with the urgency required.

DA Western Cape Spokesperson on Police Oversight and Community Safety, Benedicta van Minnen, MPP, said: “The Western Cape urgently requires more boots and detectives on the ground. Our province remains under-resourced relative to its population size and crime burden, making it increasingly difficult to effectively combat organised crime and gang networks.

The SANDF deployment must form part of a comprehensive, intelligence-led and data-driven strategy to combat gangsterism, while ensuring that community safety and constitutional rights remain at the centre of such interventions.”

While the DA-led Western Cape Government and the City of Cape Town continue to invest in additional law enforcement officers, technology and safety initiatives, these measures cannot replace the constitutional responsibility of the national government to provide adequate and effective policing. The people of the Western Cape deserve a policing system that is properly resourced, accountable and capable of protecting every resident.

The DA will continue to fight for fair resource allocation, expanded provincial policing powers and decisive national intervention to restore safety to our communities.


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