
Gauteng Police Officers linked to 27 Rape Cases since 2024
BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA
Residents in danger as Gauteng police officers linked to 27 rape cases since 2024
Safety concerns are rising in Gauteng due to alarming reports of rape incidents involving law enforcement officers in the province. The Democratic Alliance (DA) calls for urgent accountability to address this crisis within the police service, restore trust in the badge, and protect all Gauteng residents.
According to the 2024/2025 Annual Report from the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (IPID), there were 27 recorded rape cases involving police officers in Gauteng. This figure alone raises serious concerns about accountability, oversight, and the safety of residents, particularly women, who are supposed to be protected by those in uniform.
In response to a DA question in the Gauteng Provincial Legislature (GPL), Premier Panyaza Lesufi accounted for only five of these cases involving SAPS members. No clear explanation has been provided for the remaining 22 cases, which reportedly involve metro and traffic police. The five reported rape cases involving SAPS members were recorded at Ratanda, Lyttleton, Dawn Park, Brakpan, and Meyerton police stations, with victims aged between 17 and 40.
The lack of transparency from Premier Lesufi raises serious concerns, erodes public confidence in law enforcement, and must be strongly criticised.
These rape incidents are not only criminal, but they also represent a gross betrayal of public trust. Police officers take an oath to serve and protect. It is both heinous and unimaginable that an officer would abuse their authority to lure a victim into a police station office and commit sexual assault, as allegedly occurred at Meyerton SAPS.

Furthermore, these criminal acts committed by police officers have a financial burden on taxpayers, as the victim in the Meyerton case has instituted a civil claim of R1 million against the state, which, if successful, will ultimately be paid from public funds.
It is deeply concerning that Premier Lesufi would rather downplay the severity of the situation than pursue real solutions. He should engage the National Minister of Police, Firoz Cachalia, to request the devolution of certain powers to Gauteng, enabling it to ensure accountability and effective consequence management within SAPS and other law enforcement agencies in the province.
A DA-led Gauteng Provincial Government would have urgently engaged the Minister of Police to persuade him to devolve powers to the province so that it can be able to enforce mandatory CCTV cameras in all police station offices and interview rooms, increase deployment of female officers, particularly in victim support units, strengthen IPID oversight, and ensure regular public reporting on cases of police misconduct.
The people of Gauteng deserve a police service that enforces the law, not one that violates it and we would ensure that they get exactly that.
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