
Joburg Wraps Up Spaza Shop Workshops in Alex as Township Traders Secure Vital Government Cash Injection
BY : CHANON LECODEY MERRICKS ONLINE EDITOR KASiBC_AFRiCA



|
Key Financial & Operational Metrics |
District Performance Levels |
|---|---|
|
Total Allocated Municipal Budget |
R1.9 Billion |
|
Annual Financial Cost of Water Losses |
|
|
Percentage of Water Lost to Leaks/Theft |
|
|
Total Municipal Debt Book Burden |
|
|
Infrastructure Repairs & Maintenance Allocation |
5.9% (National Norm: 8%) |

|
Metric |
Investigated Scope & Impact |
|---|---|
|
Total Syndicate Shell Entities |
75 distinct companies |
|
Irregular Hospital Appointments |
73 out of 75 companies actively awarded contracts |
|
Total Contracts Siphoned |
1,237 individual purchase orders |
|
Total Irregular Value Looted |
R596,424,356.10 |
|
Estimated Kickbacks to Officials |
Approximately R100,000,000 |

DELMAS — The high-stakes extortion and money laundering case against prominent Mpumalanga taxi tycoon Joe “Ferrari” Sibanyoni (60) and his four co-accused has been postponed to 1 September 2026.
The delay in the Delmas Magistrates’ Court on Thursday was granted to allow the State sufficient time to disclose the full contents of its criminal docket to the defense team. The high-profile appearance follows weeks of dramatic legal twists and severe security concerns that recently forced the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) to re-enroll and transfer the matter out of the Kwaggafontein Magistrates’ Court.
Sibanyoni stood in the dock alongside his co-accused—Phillimon Makhaya Msiza Mvimba, Daniel Masilela, Oupa Sindane, and his corporate entity, M&J Sons—after being hauled back to court on freshly executed warrants of arrest.
The court granted each of the accused bail set at R70,000, heavily anchored by strict conditions intended to protect the state's case:
The NPA has also granted the defense team a three-month window to submit formal representations to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) in Mpumalanga.
The state's criminal sheet paints a dark picture of systemic underworld intimidation targeting local economic players between 2022 and 2025.
The state alleges that Sibanyoni and his syndicate unlawfully exerted severe, calculated pressure on a prominent local mining businessman. The accused allegedly extorted "protection fees" totaling more than R2.2 million, threatening to violently shut down the complainant's commercial operations if he failed to pay.
Financial investigators claim that the extortion money was systematically funneled and laundered through accused number two, M&J Sons, a registered entity owned and controlled directly by Sibanyoni.
"Extortion-related offenses negatively affect economic development, threaten community safety, and place immense financial and emotional pressure on victims," the NPA noted, reaffirming its aggressive stance against "protection racket" syndicates.
The trial's relocation to the Delmas Magistrates’ Court comes after intense behind-the-scenes turmoil. The matter had previously collapsed and been struck off the roll at the Kwaggafontein court when the presiding state prosecutor failed to show up.
It later emerged that the prosecutor had fled for his life after receiving credible death threats on his way to the courthouse.
While the initial magistrate controversially threw the case out and ordered the missing prosecutor's arrest, the National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) stepped in, appealed the decision, and successfully re-enrolled the matter in a more secure jurisdiction to safeguard the integrity of the trial.

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