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Tuesday, 19 May 2026

6th Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission (BNC) and Botswana-South Africa Business Forum

6th Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission (BNC) and Botswana-South Africa Business Forum

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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Deputy Minister Alexandra Abrahams attend 6th Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission (BNC) and Botswana-South Africa Business Forum

Deputy Minister Abrahams to attend the 6th Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission (BNC) and Botswana-South Africa Business Forum

The Deputy Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Ms Alexandra Abrahams, will attend the 6th Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission and deliver remarks at the Botswana–South Africa Business Forum in Gaborone from 20-21 May 2026.

The Botswana-South Africa Business Forum will be held on the margins of the 6th session of the South Africa-Botswana Bi-National Commission. The BNC serves as an important platform for strengthening bilateral relations between South Africa and Botswana by creating a conducive environment for cooperation.

During the previous BNC session, the two countries agreed to deepen collaboration in key sectors, including agriculture, transport, infrastructure, water, mining, energy, science and technology, finance, tourism, as well as trade and investment.

According to Abrahams, the Botswana-South Africa BNC will enable the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (the dtic) to advance and assess the implementation of Economic Cluster commitments made during the previous BNC. The deliberations of the BNC are expected to support stronger bilateral trade and investment ties between South Africa and Botswana.

“The implementation plan for the Memorandum of Understanding on Trade and Industrial Cooperation, will be considered. The MoU is focused on addressing market access barriers, enhancing customs cooperation, and fostering partnerships that support investment in Southern African Customs Union (SACU) value chains,” states Abrahams.

“The 6th BNC session specifically provides an opportunity to address market access challenges, particularly the trade restrictions affecting key sectors. Through this strengthened coordination, to the two countries are further able to address emerging issues whilst ensuring the inclusive implementation of commitments made during the previous–Botswana-South Africa Bi-National Commission,” says Abrahams.

“A total of 30 South African companies invested in Botswana between January 2003 and March 2026. These investments span various sectors, including financial services, minerals, business services, communications, hospitality and tourism, consumer products, software and information technology services, building materials, business machinery and equipment, food and beverages, among others,” adds Abrahams.

Abrahams says that South Africa and Botswana's investment relations underscore the importance of strategic collaboration, in addressing the economic challenges and enhancing trade and investment.

South Africa is Botswana’s 2nd trading partner, accounting for approximately 15% of Botswana’s total exports. South Africa exported R73.6 billion worth of goods in 2025. South Africa, on the other hand, is Botswana’s main trading partner accounting for 60% of Botswana’s total imports. South Africa imported a total value of an estimated R7.6 billion in 2025.

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MUNICIPALITIES TO IN-SOURCE WATER TANKER SERVICES

MUNICIPALITIES TO IN-SOURCE WATER TANKER SERVICES

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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MEC MAMABOLO CALLS ON MUNICIPALITIES TO IN-SOURCE WATER TANKER SERVICES 

Gauteng MEC for Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Infrastructure Development, Jacob Mamabolo, has raised concern over the escalating costs incurred by municipalities for the temporary supply of water through outsourced water tanker services

This follows revelations by Mamabolo that some municipalities have spent as much as R264 million over a three-year period on water tanker services. While water tankering remains critical in ensuring water security, particularly in areas experiencing water shortages and within informal settlements, he has urged municipalities to increase investment in procuring and maintaining their own water tanker fleets. “We are encouraged by the investments some municipalities are already making towards procuring their own portable water tankers. 

While this is a welcome development, we believe more resources must be directed towards expanding these capacities, as outsourced tanker services continue to drive significant expenditure,” said Mamabolo. Gauteng CoGTA continues to engage municipalities to monitor service delivery challenges and ensure appropriate corrective measures are implemented to stabilise water supply across the province. 

Through the Local Government Turnaround Strategy, the provincial government is working closely with local and national spheres of government to advance coordinated, province-wide interventions aimed at strengthening municipalities, improving governance, and enhancing service delivery outcomes. 

On Sunday, 24 May 2026, the province, together with all 11 municipalities, will provide the public with updates on progress made across various areas, including governance, financial management, infrastructure development, and ongoing efforts to improve service delivery across the province. 

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Monday, 18 May 2026

MISLEADING STATEMENTS ON THE INTEGRITY 2024 NATIONAL AND PROVINCIAL ELECTIONS


MISLEADING STATEMENTS ON THE INTEGRITY 2024 NATIONAL AND PROVINCIAL ELECTIONS 

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

LISTEN HERE @KASIBCAUDIO

Electoral Commission concerned about misleading statements on the integrity of NPE 2024 results 

The Electoral Commission notes with concern sustained, yet inaccurate, statements regarding the management and integrity of the results of the 2024 National and Provincial Elections. The Electoral Commission is particularly concerned by the persistent false statements by political party leaders, which have the potential to undermine public confidence in the integrity of the impending elections of municipal councils. 

The latest of these statements appears in the podcast featuring the President of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) in which he alleges that the Electoral Commission swapped votes at his voting station (Mponegele Primary School) in Polokwane, Limpopo. Allegedly, his party votes were attributed to the African National Congress (ANC). 

This is not correct. Results slips in the hands of the Commission indicate that the Mponegele Primary School vote count is the same as those captured on the Commission’s Results System.  The Commission wishes to indicate that South Africa’s result collation process is robust and predicated on transparency, extensive safeguards, and checks and balances which are designed to protect the integrity of the election results. 

The Commission is acutely aware that result slips which are completed at voting stations represent the ultimate record of the political will of the voters within voting districts. Hence, the inherent checks and balances institutionalised in the result collation process.  

Some of the safeguards inherent in the results collation process include the following elements: 

• Counting of the votes at the voting station in front of party agents and observers 

• Compiling a result slip at the voting station and having that countersigned by party agents  

• Capturing the results into the system built for that purpose using a double-blind capture process 

 • Procuring services of the independent audit industry to audit the correctness of the captured results against result slips 

• Independent auditing of the functional modalities of the result system

• Affording political parties the opportunity to audit the result system 

• Making voting station results available to political parties and the media through dedicated facilities at Results Operating Centres

• Permitting parties to photograph and broadcast the results slips as soon as they are completed.

As part of the normal consultation with electoral stakeholders, senior officials of the Electoral Commission already have a scheduled meeting with the EFF leadership on 21 May 2026. 

The meeting requested by the party will be used to brief the party on election readiness matters and deal with any issues that the party may wish to raise relating to the electoral process.  

The Electoral Commission remains open to constructive engagement with all political parties through Political Liaison Committees (PLCs) on matters concerning the integrity, credibility and strengthening of South Africa’s electoral democracy

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Science, Technology and Innovation announces R10.4 Billion Budget for 2026/27 Financial Year

Science, Technology and Innovation announces R10.4 Billion Budget for 2026/27 Financial Year

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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The Minister and Deputy Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Professor Blade Nzimande and Dr Nomalungelo Gina, today announced a R10.4 billion budget for the 2026/2027 financial year, showing continued investment in priority areas of science, technology, and innovation in South Africa.  

 Investment in cutting-edge research technologies, high-level skills development, research infrastructure, and innovation that advances economic growth, social development, and South Africa’s global competitiveness are among some of the priority areas for the Department of Science, Technology and Innovation.

Guided by the Decadal Plan 2022 – 2032 and the Department’s institutional mantra to place STI at the centre of government, education, industry, and society, the budget priority plans reflected the Department’s commitment to building a transformed, inclusive, and responsive national system of innovation.

 Addressing Parliament on Friday, 15 May, Minister Nzimande said that with the world facing one of the most unpredictable and precarious moments in human history, the future depends on the country’s willingness to use innovation to advance justice, equality, and peace.  

For this reason, the Minister said the allocation would be used in the next three years to expand the scale and impact of the Department’s work.

This includes intensifying efforts to raise gross expenditure on research and development to 1.5% of GDP, accelerating the transformation and expansion of STI human resources and research workforce, and strengthening the coordination and direction across the NSI through, among others, the Inter-Ministerial Committee on STI and the Presidential Plenary for STI.

The Department will also maintain support for key science projects, such as the Square Kilometre Array, and strengthen pandemic preparedness capacity. Strategic innovation compacts with STI-intensive state departments and private sector partners will also be forged, as well as upgrading critical science infrastructure and developing critical high-end skills, including through the Presidential PhD Programme.

The Minister said the Department would also be mobilising more funding and resources to expand the impact of key programmes such as artificial intelligence, energy security, space, vaccine manufacturing, and indigenous knowledge systems.

There will also be continued efforts to strengthen strategic partnerships, especially across Africa and the Global South, and increase public awareness about the contribution of our public science system to human development through a stronger public engagement and communication campaign.

Among the progress made last year in the implementation of the Decadal Plan 2022-20232, with KfW, a German bank, 19 infrastructure projects were approved to strengthen South Africa’s vaccine development, testing, manufacturing, and regulation.

“We also allocated R14.9 million to strengthen bio-surveillance, ease livestock export restrictions linked to foot-and-mouth disease, and support the Biosecurity Hub at the University of Pretoria,” said the Minister.

On boosting innovation in manufacturing, the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research launched a Hot Isostatic Press facility in Tshwane to strengthen local manufacturing, improve metal component performance, and reduce reliance on offshore processing.

Deputy Minister Gina said the government was clear that without significantly stronger industry investment in innovation, South Africa will not be able to compete at the pace required by a rapidly changing global economy.  

“We are therefore intensifying our engagement with business leadership to unlock greater investment in science, technology and innovation for the country. To drive this forward, we are establishing dedicated working groups and workstreams with major national corporations to build impactful, long-term industry partnerships,” said Dr Gina.

A key highlight of the work on indigenous knowledge systems was the graduation of 96 students with bachelor’s degrees in IKS from North-West University. The Department has funded this programme since 2013, and student enrolment has grown steadily over the years.

Another highlight was the establishment of 13 Living Labs, nine Centres for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, and mLabs in four provinces.  

These facilities provide a physical space and innovation infrastructure for innovators to ideate and progress their prototype solutions to market through the offering of structured innovation support, training, and a combination of technical and innovation skills training.

The Deputy Minister said the DSTI was determined to change the face of the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics professional pipeline in South Africa.  

“The profile of our professional pipeline is overwhelmingly white, male, and urban. Women and rural people are underrepresented. Transformation of the STI in its class composition, gender, and race is fundamental to our agenda,” said Dr Gina.

She said the budget vote demonstrated the Department’s shift from the old Department that paid more attention to the sciences and research.  

“While these areas remain important, DSTI is making a strategic focus on innovation and technologies in strengthening the system of national innovation. We are making headway in this mandate; we will leave no one behind,” said the Deputy Minister.

The Budget Vote followed a public engagement programme hosted by the Department and its entities at Iziko Museum. Attended by local and international stakeholders in the National System of Innovation, including school learners and university students, it showcased a number of exhibitions and a public lecture on Artificial Intelligence delivered by Professor of Computer Science, Vukosi Marivate.

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Minister Leon Schreiber: Home Affairs Dept Budget Vote 2026/27


Minister Leon Schreiber: Home Affairs Dept Budget Vote 2026/27

BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA

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Budget Vote Speech delivered by the Minister of Home Affairs on the occasion of the Home Affairs Budget Vote Debate (Vote 5) in the National Assembly

Honourable Speaker, Thoko Didiza

Deputy Minister of Home Affairs, Honourable Njabulo Nzuza

Chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs, Honourable Mosa Chabane

Honourable Members of the Portfolio Committee,

Director-General of the Department of Home Affairs, Mr Tommy Makhode CEO of Government Printing Works, Ms Alinah Fosi

Commissioner of the Border Management Authority, Dr Michael Masiapato Distinguished Guests,

Ladies and Gentlemen,

A little less than two years ago, I introduced the Home Affairs @ home programme to reimagine, rebuild, and reform the Home Affairs ecosystem from top to bottom.

Across the Department of Home Affairs, the Border Management Authority, and Government Printing Works, I committed to the people of South Africa that we would pursue digital transformation to urgently resolve the systemic failures that long dogged this ecosystem.

Crucially, the reform agenda of this administration recognised from day one that the old service delivery model was not only broken, but wholly misguided.

Under the old way of doing things, access to Home Affairs services was premised on forcing 63 million citizens to use just 349 physical locations to obtain critical services.

Form the start, we had the courage to do things differently by recognising that this ecosystem did not only need piecemeal changes.

It required radical reform that would turn the traditional service delivery model on its head.

Instead of forcing every single South African, as well as every legitimate visitor, to go and stand in a queue to access just a handful of physical offices, our vision is to use the power of technology to bring our services closer and closer to the people – until we deliver it right in their own homes.

Home Affairs @ home.

The backbone of this reform journey is defined by three flagship projects.

First, to massively expand inclusion and access to physical documents, such as Smart IDs and Passports, through a ground-breaking new digital partnership model with the banking sector.

Second, to build the world’s most sophisticated digital visa processing system to eliminate fraud and inefficiency through the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA).

And finally, to build a new Digital Identity system that enables remote verification and introduces digital versions of Home Affairs products that South Africans can securely access through their smartphones.

Just two years later, our vision and courage in embracing wholesale reform is paying off in the biggest way imaginable.

Millions of South Africans are beginning to feel the difference.

Let’s start with our digital partnership to expand access to physical documents.

By digitalising the long-standing partnership between Home Affairs and the banking sector, we have already expanded access to Smart ID replacement services by a staggering 47% just two months after the system went live.

After only eight weeks, a total of 167 bank branches across the length and breadth of South Africa now offer Smart ID replacement services, with more branches going live every week.

Through this new model, the Smart ID application process has been completely digitalised.

Gone are the days of spending a whole day in a queue.

At these 167 bank branches, it now takes as little as five minutes to apply for an ID.

No prior bookings are required. No paperwork is needed.

And there is no official discretion, completely sealing the system off from manipulation and fraud by relying on the power of biometric technology.

It is therefore little wonder that, within just eight weeks, a total of 118 434 Smart ID applications have already been successfully processed through this new system for people who are switching from the Green ID book to the Smart ID, or replacing a lost ID card.

This project holds the key to ensuring that each of the 16 million people who still use the vulnerable Green ID book are able to switch to the more-secure Smart ID.

The Green ID is the most defrauded document on the African continent, and sits at the heart of financial fraud and identity theft in our country.

For the first time, Home Affairs now has a clear roadmap to ensure that every South African is able to switch to a Smart ID, which will enable us to finally end the recognition of the Green ID book as a valid form of identification.

Given the astonishing success of this project, we have raised our ambitions accordingly.

I can announce today that, by the end of 2026, we aim to roll this service out to at least 750 bank branches, extending them into every corner of South Africa.

Over the next few weeks, we will also roll out first time Smart ID and Passport applications through this new system.

And we will introduce doorstep delivery of IDs and Passports for the first time in South African history.

Thanks to our laser focus on digital transformation, South Africans will shortly have the option of having their enabling document securely couriered right to their own doorstep, without the need to travel anywhere just to do a collection.

Home Affairs @ home.

Let us now turn to our second flagship, the ETA.

Ahead of the G20 leaders’ summit, we rolled out the ETA for tourists from China,

India, Mexico and Indonesia.

This new system uses biometric and machine learning technology to enable prospective travellers to apply for a tourist visa on their laptop or smartphone, and receive their visa within just 24 hours.

The ETA transforms national security, by checking 40 different parameters to verify the authenticity of a passport and by using liveness detection to verify a selfie of the applicant against their passport photo.

The BMA then uses facial recognition technology once the traveller arrives at the border post, to verify their identity and visa.

Once again, this is all done without any scope for discretion or manipulation.

Even with the rollout initially limited to just four countries, I can report today that the ETA has already processed over 75 000 applications, resulting in more than 71 000 approvals and nearly 4 500 rejections.

Think about that for a moment.

That’s almost 4 500 people who were prevented by the ETA from obtaining a visa, who may otherwise have entered our country illegitimately under the old manual and paper-based system.

With final technical work currently underway, we will shortly expand the ETA to tourists from many more countries.

This will unlock entire new growth markets for our tourism sector in ways that were unimaginable under the previous manual and paper-based system.

Over the remainder of this administration, we will roll out the ETA to cover all visa categories, in order to entirely eliminate the space for inefficiency, fraud and corruption.

Once our rollout of the ETA is complete, it will go down in history as the single most powerful reform ever implemented to secure our immigration system, while enabling legitimate travellers to conveniently obtain visas through their smart device.

Home Affairs @ home.

For our third flagship reform, Digital ID, we have recently published draft regulations in terms of the Identification Act.

I invite all stakeholders to comment on these draft regulations before the closing date of 6 June, so that we can implement an appropriate and fit-for-purpose regulatory framework for this new system that will enable South Africans to securely access Home Affairs services in the palm of their own hand.

Home Affairs @ home. Madam Speaker,

These three flagship reforms are supported by a comprehensive culture change process.

This includes a digital training component that is equipping thousands of our officials for the future world of work.

At the same time, our crackdown on corruption is gathering pace at an unprecedented rate.

Since the start of this administration, the Department of Home Affairs has secured 10 criminal convictions, 14 arrests, and 65 dismissals.

The BMA has secured an additional 26 arrests and 34 dismissals.

We are now carrying out dismissals, arrests and convictions on a near-weekly basis.

Crooked officials are no longer asking whether they will be caught.

They are spending all their time wondering when it will be their turn. My answer to them is simple: sooner than you think.

We will not rest until every single corrupt official is swept away by the tide accountability that is washing over Home Affairs.

Our reform drive is also supported by a series of legal and policy breakthroughs.

Earlier this year, Cabinet approved the Revised White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection, which will now be converted into a draft bill designed to transform the very foundation of the South African state.

By implementing the Revised White Paper, we will introduce the first-safe-country-principle to end the practice of asylum seekers “picking and choosing” South Africa as their only destination in the region.

While upholding our fundamental constitutional commitments and the rights of legitimate refugees, this legal reform will empower us to reject asylum seekers who deliberately travel through other safe countries with the sole aim of coming to South Africa.

Let me make it clear today that South Africa is not the only safe country in our region, and through the implementation of this new policy, we will no longer tolerate the abuse of our country’s migration system.

This reform was further bolstered just this past week, when we won a landmark case in the Constitutional Court.

The Court confirmed our position that asylum seekers must not be allowed to submit endless repeat applications while remaining in the country indefinitely once their original application has been rejected.

We will use this judgement from the highest court in the land, in combination with the legislative changes flowing from the Revised White Paper, to ensure

that we ramp up lawful deportations even more effectively than we have already done.

Over the past two financial years, Home Affairs has carried out nearly 110 000 deportations – an increase of 46% compared to previous years.

This is in addition to the over 945 000 people that the BMA has prevented from entering into South Africa, either illegally or because they did not have the required documentation, since its establishment.

In fact, under Operation New Broom that I launched last year, Home Affairs conducted an incredible 10 700 enforcement inspections across the country during the past financial year – overperforming our annual target of 4 000 by more than double.

In the last year alone, Home Affairs has done more immigration enforcement operations than during the entire five-year term of the previous administration.

Through our unwavering commitment to upholding South Africa’s Constitution and our immigration laws, we are rapidly restoring the rule of law in a domain where it was eroded over decades.

Finally, our reform programme is supported by the single biggest investment ever in border infrastructure.

Last month, the BMA announced the bidders that have been selected for a R12.5 billion public-private partnership to demolish and rebuild our country’s six busiest land ports of entry.

Taken together, our reform agenda is directly enhancing national security, improving the efficiency of service delivery, and repositioning Home Affairs as a powerful economic enabler.

Through this agenda, we are reforming what was once the most maligned department in all of government, into a world-leader in modern governance.

If ever there was an agenda that called on all of us to put our country over politics, it is this one.

We are laying a modern and future-fit new foundation for the South African state that will stand our country in good stead for decades to 

Home Affairs @ home.

For our third flagship reform, Digital ID, we have recently published draft regulations in terms of the Identification Act.

I invite all stakeholders to comment on these draft regulations before the closing date of 6 June, so that we can implement an appropriate and fit-for-purpose regulatory framework for this new system that will enable South Africans to securely access Home Affairs services in the palm of their own hand.

Home Affairs @ home. Madam Speaker,

These three flagship reforms are supported by a comprehensive culture change process.

This includes a digital training component that is equipping thousands of our officials for the future world of work.

At the same time, our crackdown on corruption is gathering pace at an unprecedented rate.

Since the start of this administration, the Department of Home Affairs has secured 10 criminal convictions, 14 arrests, and 65 dismissals.

The BMA has secured an additional 26 arrests and 34 dismissals.

We are now carrying out dismissals, arrests and convictions on a near-weekly basis.

Crooked officials are no longer asking whether they will be caught.

They are spending all their time wondering when it will be their turn. My answer to them is simple: sooner than you think.

We will not rest until every single corrupt official is swept away by the tide accountability that is washing over Home Affairs.

Our reform drive is also supported by a series of legal and policy breakthroughs.

Earlier this year, Cabinet approved the Revised White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection, which will now be converted into a draft bill designed to transform the very foundation of the South African state.

By implementing the Revised White Paper, we will introduce the first-safe-country-principle to end the practice of asylum seekers “picking and choosing” South Africa as their only destination in the region.

While upholding our fundamental constitutional commitments and the rights of legitimate refugees, this legal reform will empower us to reject asylum seekers who deliberately travel through other safe countries with the sole aim of coming to South Africa.

Let me make it clear today that South Africa is not the only safe country in our region, and through the implementation of this new policy, we will no longer tolerate the abuse of our country’s migration system.

This reform was further bolstered just this past week, when we won a landmark case in the Constitutional Court.

The Court confirmed our position that asylum seekers must not be allowed to submit endless repeat applications while remaining in the country indefinitely once their original application has been rejected.

We will use this judgement from the highest court in the land, in combination with the legislative changes flowing from the Revised White Paper, to ensure

that we ramp up lawful deportations even more effectively than we have already done.

Over the past two financial years, Home Affairs has carried out nearly 110 000 deportations – an increase of 46% compared to previous years.

This is in addition to the over 945 000 people that the BMA has prevented from entering into South Africa, either illegally or because they did not have the required documentation, since its establishment.

In fact, under Operation New Broom that I launched last year, Home Affairs conducted an incredible 10 700 enforcement inspections across the country during the past financial year – overperforming our annual target of 4 000 by more than double.

In the last year alone, Home Affairs has done more immigration enforcement operations than during the entire five-year term of the previous administration.

Through our unwavering commitment to upholding South Africa’s Constitution and our immigration laws, we are rapidly restoring the rule of law in a domain where it was eroded over decades.

Finally, our reform programme is supported by the single biggest investment ever in border infrastructure.

Last month, the BMA announced the bidders that have been selected for a R12.5 billion public-private partnership to demolish and rebuild our country’s six busiest land ports of entry.

Taken together, our reform agenda is directly enhancing national security, improving the efficiency of service delivery, and repositioning Home Affairs as a powerful economic enabler.

Through this agenda, we are reforming what was once the most maligned department in all of government, into a world-leader in modern governance.

If ever there was an agenda that called on all of us to put our country over politics, it is this one.

We are laying a modern and future-fit new foundation for the South African state that will stand our country in good stead for decades to come.

I therefore proudly table budget Vote 5 for Home Affairs before this House.

The budget totals R13.8 billion for the 2026/27 financial year, R12.8 billion for the next year, and R13.3 billion for 2028/29.

It includes funding not only for our reform programme across the entire ecosystem, but it is also this budget vote that will enable the Independent Electoral Commission to deliver the upcoming local government elections through an additional allocation of R1.1 billion.

The national voter registration campaign will officially launch on 27 May 2026 under the message: “Get Up, Show Up, Vote.”

This is preceded by a targeted voter communication and registration campaign that is currently being rolled-out across 212 municipalities until the end of this month.

These are municipalities that have been impacted by ward delimitation and voting district changes.

To enhance operational readiness, more than 6 100 field workers have been deployed across the five affected provinces to support registration activities and community engagement.

We urge all the affected communities to be on the lookout for these field workers and to ensure that their registration is correctly captured.

Madam Speaker,

My sincere appreciation goes to Deputy Minister Nzuza, DG Makhode, Commissioner Masiapato, and CEO Fosi, as well as their respective teams, for

their continued dedication to delivering concrete reforms that make South Africa a better country for all its people.

I call on every Honourable Member who wants to see a successful local election, who wants to eradicate corruption and abuse, who wants to position this ecosystem as an economic enabler to create jobs, and who wants Home Affairs to complete our digital revolution to deliver dignity for all, to support this budget vote.

Thank you.

Minister Leon Schreiber

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