Premier Lesufi wishes the Matric Class of 2025 well in the upcoming final exams

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 



ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

Premier Lesufi wishes the Matric Class of 2025 well in the  upcoming final exams  

Gauteng Premier, Panyaza Lesufi, has extended his best wishes to the  Class of 2025 as they prepare to sit for the National Senior Certificate (NSC) examinations, which officially commence on Tuesday, 21 October 2025.  Gauteng has consistently maintained its position among the top three performing provinces in the NSC examinations

In 2024, the province achieved an impressive 88.4% pass rate, placing it third nationally behind the Free State (91%) and KwaZulu-Natal (89.5%).  This year, a total of 188,057 candidates have registered to write the NSC exams in Gauteng, (144,315 full-time and 43,742 part-time learners). The examinations will take place at 1,007 centres across the province (741 public schools, 267 independent schools, and 25 designated centres).  

Throughout the year, the Gauteng Provincial Government has worked tirelessly to support and prepare the matriculants for success. All parents and guardians are called upon to support the learners throughout the exam period.  

Systems have also been put in place to mitigate potential disruptions, such as service delivery protests and operational challenges, ensuring that all learners can write their exams under safe and conducive conditions.  “On behalf of the Gauteng Provincial Government, I wish the Class of 2025 all the best in their upcoming final examinations. May your hard work and dedication throughout the year bear fruit as you prepare for these exams, which mark the culmination of your basic education,” said Premier Lesufi.  

The Gauteng Provincial Government remains confident that the Class of 2025 will continue the province’s proud tradition of academic excellence and resilience.  

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

NATIONAL DIALOGUE ENTERS NEXT PHASE TOWARDS APPOINTMENT OF THE STEERING COMMITTEE

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 



ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

NATIONAL DIALOGUE ENTERS NEXT PHASE TOWARDS APPOINTMENT OF THE STEERING COMMITTEE

The National Dialogue process has reached a pivotal stage with the completion of the nomination of sectoral representatives to the National Dialogue Steering Committee

The first National Convention held on 15-16 August 2025 approved the mandate, responsibilities and composition of the Steering Committee, and agreed that each of the identified sectors would hold consultations to decide on nominees to serve on the Steering Committee and its sub-committees.

No less than 26 sectors have to date submitted nominations for the Steering Committee.

The list of nominated Steering Committee members has been handed over to the Eminent Persons Group (EPG) for quality assurance. For its part, the EPG will submit its recommendations to the President in his role as head of state and convener of the National Dialogue for finalisation.

Once approved by the President, the Steering Committee will coordinate the roll out of public dialogues across the country.

It is anticipated that the process of appointing the Steering Committee will be concluded in the coming weeks.

President Ramaphosa has received the Handover Report of the Convention Organising Committee (COC) and the Report on the National Convention, bringing to an end the mandate of the COC.

The Convention Organising Committee was tasked by the President with organising the first National Convention following the withdrawal of some foundations from the process.

President Ramaphosa said: “As a country, we owe a great debt of gratitude to the members of the Convention Organising Committee. Working with the Eminent Persons Group and the Inter-Ministerial Committee, the committee made sure that hundreds of delegates from around the country were able to gather at the National Convention to endorse and to launch the National Dialogue. Through a truly collective effort, the National Convention proceeding smoothly and gave people from all sectors an opportunity to express themselves.”

“We must also recognise the vital role played by the legacy foundations and other civil society organisations in the Preparatory Task Team, which were instrumental in getting the National Dialogue off the ground.”

“It is extremely important now that the momentum that has been built up and the expectations that have been raised are not allowed to dissipate. We need to ensure that as the Steering Committee is established, there is no disruption in the processes that need to happen,” he said.

The Eminent Persons Group (EPG), the Inter-Ministerial Committee (IMC) and the Presidency remain custodians of the process’s integrity and will continue to safeguard its credibility until it is handed over to the Steering Committee. 

Work is underway to establish a fully-fledged National Dialogue Secretariat, housed at NEDLAC, which will provide institutional support to the process. 



MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

SARS Welcomes Judgment on Mr Lucky Montana

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 




ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA

SARS Welcomes Judgment on Mr Lucky Montana

The South African Revenue Service (SARS) welcomes the favourable judgment handed down on 17 October 2025 by the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng (case no. 2023-047735). This decision came as a result of an application brought by SARS for the sequestration of Mr Tshepo Lucky Montana.

On 5 June 2024, Mr Montana filed a notice of motion and founding affidavit seeking condonation for the late submission of his answering affidavit in the sequestration proceedings. Subsequently, on 14 August 2024, SARS brought an application to strike out, in terms of Rule 6(5) of the Uniform Rules of Court, on the basis that Mr Montana’s founding affidavit contained scandalous, vexatious, and irrelevant allegations.

On 21 July 2025, the Court granted SARS’s application to strike out and dismissed Mr Montana’s condonation application with costs. Mr Montana thereafter filed an application for leave to appeal against this judgment. The matter was heard on 17 October 2025 and the application for leave to appeal was dismissed with costs.

SARS’s strategic intent is to foster a culture of voluntary compliance. To this end, the organisation provides clarity and certainty to taxpayers regarding their legal obligations and continues to make it easy and seamless to comply through modern, enabling digital platforms. Conversely, SARS ensures that non-compliance becomes hard and costly for those who wilfully choose to disregard their tax responsibilities.

Commenting on the matter, SARS Commissioner Edward Kieswetter stated:
“SARS recognises that the vast majority of taxpayers are honest and willing to do the right thing by meeting their registration, filing, and payment obligations. Pursuant to SARS’ mandate of collecting all the revenue due to the fiscus, we will do whatever is legally permissible to deliver on that undertaking. In doing so, SARS will always uphold and respect the right of taxpayers to explore and exercise their constitutionally guaranteed rights to approach courts to seek a whatever remedy they prefer. SARS believes that all South Africans are equal before the law, and the organisation is enjoined by the law to enforce its provisions without fear, favour, or prejudice.”

SARS will not provide any further comment on this matter.

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

Sol Plaatje Municipal Manager Suspension and Secondment

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 



ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

Sol Plaatje Municipal Manager Suspension and Secondment

The Democratic Alliance (DA) will report our strong opposition on the secondment of convicted fraudster, Busisiwe Mgaguli, to the position of acting Municipal Manager of Sol Plaatje, to the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional AffairsVelenkosini Hlabisa, for investigation.

This comes after the Speaker, Dipuo Peters, claimed that our request for a Special Council Meeting to deliberate on this matter was technically incorrect. We strongly dispute this and believe that her denial of our request is an attempt by the ANC council members to avoid accountability and buy more time to facilitate their own political agenda.

The fact that Peters refuses to allow engagement on Mgaguli’s involvement in financial crimes, raises many questions. As does her failure to consider that the suspension of suspended Municipal Manager, Thapelo Matlala, comes to an end today. His suspension can also only be extended by holding a Special Council meeting before the day is over. Failure to do so will permit him to return to office tomorrow, despite investigations into the allegations against him likely not completed yet.

Given the grave nature of the ongoing saga regarding the municipal manager position, the serious repercussions for service delivery and the financial and legal implications for the municipality, this is a slap in the face of Kimberley residents.

DA provincial spokesperson on COGHSTA, Gizella Opperman, will submit our concerns to Hlabisa directly, given that MEC of COGHSTA, Bentley Vass, is responsible for the secondment. We want Hlabisa to consider the processes and the grounds for both Mgaguli’s secondment and Matlala’s suspension. The matter will also be raised in upcoming legislature portfolio committee meetings.

Sol Plaatje municipality is not an ANC fiefdom. There are rules and regulations and a multi-party council to whom this institution must account. Above all, there are also the citizens of Kimberley to whom Sol Plaatje has a constitutional mandate to deliver clean governance and service delivery.

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

SAPS breakaway from SITA – Police Deputy Minister Dr. Boshiela confirms to the NCOP

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 



ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

SAPS breakaway from SITA – Police Deputy Minister Dr. Boshiela confirms to the NCOP

The Democratic Alliance (DA) notes the confirmation by Deputy Minister of Police, Dr Polly Boshiela, to the National Council of Provinces - Select Committee on Security and Justice, that the South African Police Service (SAPS) has “officially served its divorce papers” to the State Information Technology Agency (SITA).

In a revelation made before the Select Committee yesterday, the Deputy Minister disclosed that SAPS will no longer be bound by SITA’s outdated systems, which have for years crippled technological innovation and slowed police responsiveness. The Deputy. Minister further confirmed that the Minister of Finance has approved SAPS’s request to procure a new independent service provider for its ICT systems.

The DA has long maintained that SITA has become a digital bottleneck, a stumbling block to modern governance that has left departments like SAPS and Home Affairs trapped in inefficiency, corruption, and technological decay.

This confirmation is a victory not just for the DA’s consistent oversight efforts, but more importantly, for the millions of South Africans who rely on functional, tech-enabled police stations for their safety and security.

The Deputy Minister also revealed that she was part of the recent official delegation to China, where she was introduced to cutting-edge police technology systems. These innovations, including smart surveillance, integrated case-tracking, and data-driven policing models, highlight the urgent need for South Africa to embrace next-generation digital policing tools to strengthen investigations, accelerate case turnaround times, and improve community safety outcomes.

The DA now calls on the Minister of Police to ensure that this transition to a new ICT provider is transparent, corruption-free, and prioritises service delivery over political patronage, and will pose written questions to the Minister to ensure that transparency is kept.

This move must translate into practical upgrades at the station level from rural KwaZulu-Natal to the Free State and Eastern Cape, where communities have suffered most, due to outdated systems, broken communication tools, and unreliable databases.

This can be a turning point for South African policing. It comes at a time when SAPS has an opportunity to press the reset button.

The DA will continue to use our parliamentary oversight role to monitor the implementation of this decision, ensuring that the separation from SITA leads to real improvements in frontline policing, not just another costly government restructuring exercise.

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

MINISTER SIMELANE AND DEPUTY MINISTER MHLAULI TO HAND OVER TITLE DEEDS IN NORTHERN CAPE

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 




ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

MINISTER SIMELANE AND DEPUTY MINISTER MHLAULI TO HAND OVER TITLE DEEDS IN NORTHERN CAPE

The Minister of Human Settlements, Thembi Simelane together with the Deputy Minister in the Presidency, Nonceba Mhlauli, as DDM District Champion, the Northen Cape MEC for Cooperative Governance, Human Settlements and Traditional Affairs (COGHSTA), Bentley Vass, will hand over title deeds to the rightful owners in Pampierstad, Northern Cape, within the Frances Baard District Municipality.

This marks a significant step in the Department of Human Settlements’ ongoing commitment to eliminate the national title deeds’ backlog

In August 2025, the Minister and the Provincial MECs responsible for Human Settlements re-launched the Title Deeds Fridays Campaign, a nationwide drive aimed at mobilising all stakeholders to support the title deeds restoration programme. The campaign seeks to restore dignity, strengthen tenure security, and promote economic empowerment for beneficiaries. 

The Executive Mayor of the Frances Baard District Municipality, Cllr Wende Marekwa, the Mayor of Phokwane Local Municipality, Cllr Willem Harmseand other local Mayors within the Frances Baard District will also be in attendance.

Details are as follows:
Date: Friday, 17 October 2025
Activity 1: Door-to-door delivery of title deeds to five senior citizens
Time: 10h00

Venue: Ward 1, Sakhile, Pampierstad, Phokwane Local Municipality. 
Activity two: Community engagement and title deeds handover
Time: 10h30
Venue:Condo Open Space, Sakhile, Pampierstad, Phokwane Local Municipality

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA

Gauteng government takes bold steps to strengthen crime fighting interventions

MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA 



ONLINE EDITOR @KASIBC_AFRICA 

Gauteng government takes bold steps to strengthen crime fighting interventions 

The Gauteng Provincial Government (GPG) reaffirms its commitment to build safer communities following EXCO resolutions on improving safety in Gauteng. 

The provincial government will continue to use integrated crime prevention strategies to enhance law enforcement efforts, visibility and safety of the public. Notably, the EXCO resolutions are imperative in ensuring a unified approach in the fight against crime, corruption, vandalism, and lawlessness. 

To this end, the provincial government has made strides in responding to prevalent safety challenges as highlighted in the 2025 State of the Province Address (SOPA), known as the G13 problems, which are: 
1. Cable theft and vandalism
2. Crime and lawlessness 
3. Mushrooming of informal settlements 
4. Increase in GBVF amongst others.

Gauteng law enforcement officials are hard at work to address these challenges through coordinated operations aimed at ensuring high police visibility, visiting hotspot areas and checking for compliance at liquor outlets and secondhand shops and scrapyards. 
• This work corroborates the provincial government’s efforts to strengthen the fight against crime through collaboration between Law Enforcement Agencies such as the South African Police Service (SAPS), Gauteng Traffic Police (GTP), Metro and municipal Police Departments and Gauteng Traffic Wardens (GTWs) amongst others. 

• Law enforcement agencies have increased their deployment in highcrime areas to ensure that there is timeous response to incidents and intelligence by working with Community Policing Forums (CPFs).  

• Our traffic officers are hard at work to intensify road safety operations and apprehend individuals engaging in irresponsible behaviour, including driving under the influence of alcohol, reckless and negligent driving, and jaywalking. These are the major contributing factors leading road accidents and fatalities. Through public education, and community engagement, our officers aim to reduce the number of fatalities and road accidents as well as influence a culture of responsible road use.

 • Conduct arrests for driving under the influence of alcohol, reckless and negligent driving as well as jaywalking. These are the major contributing factors to road fatalities, 

• CCTV cameras have been rolled out across the province, targeting TISH areas to monitor criminal activities in communities and improve response times. As the country gears up to the G20, the provincial government is ready to host this prestigious event, to which the security workstream conducts weekly oversight visits to monitor the progress and that operations are running smoothly to ensure public safety and the safety of our visitors. 

• Furthermore, the installation of CCTV cameras in key venues such as the Nasrec Expo Centre is underway to ensure consistent monitoring of activities in that area. 

• More than 150 critical infrastructures across the province is continuously being monitored because this is the backbone of our social and economic networks. This includes traffic lights, substations, water and sanitation systems, transport nodes, public and private facilities amongst others. 

More than 8600 arrests have been effected across the province in Quarter 2 of the 2025/26 financial years, with charges ranging from damage to infrastructure, drug related arrests, theft, public drinking, driving under the influence of alcohol, illegal mining, common assault, theft and possession of unlicensed firearms amongst others. 

Furthermore, in a comprehensive approach to address substance abuse in communities. Law enforcement agencies are hard at work to arrest drug dealers and dismantle networks that bring instability to communities. The scourge of drug abuse affects everyone; all members of the public are encouraged to report any suspicious behaviour to their nearest police station.

To this end, the Gauteng Provincial Government will be launching a massive Anti-Substance Response Programme on the 27 October 2025 to reach out to communities to work together and assist those who are affected by this scourge, particularly young people. Importantly, government is intensifying law enforcement operations to raid drug dens. All members of society are encouraged to assist, as they better places to identify where these drugs are being sold. 

The province is dealing decisively with the mushrooming of informal settlements, through the assistance of municipalities and various law enforcement agencies, government is taking an approach to act timeously when dismantling informal settlements, especially those that are not formally recognized. 

Leading this initiative is the Priority Committee on land invasion, which consists of various Heads of Departments (HODs) for the Community Safety, Infrastructure Development, Roads and Transport as well as Human Settlements amongst others. This committee will report directly to the ProvJoints following the land invasion workshop held on Tuesday, 14 October 2025. 

 This is an important step to maintain law and order, sustainable development and stop organised criminal syndicates who prey on vulnerable communities by selling land illegally. The Gauteng Traffic Police (GTP) airwing is a vital force in dealing with violent and organised crimes in the province. Notably, coordinated operations involving various role players such as SAPS, Directorate for Priority Investigation (DPCI) and private security companies have yielded positive results in executing intelligence-led operations which led to arrests for dangerous, wanted suspects involved in Cash-In-Transit (CIT) heists, truck and vehicle hijackings, kidnappings and house-breaking. Clarity on the Status of the Gauteng Traffic Wardens The establishment of the Gauteng Traffic Wardens (GTWs) has raised many concerns regarding their legality and mandate. 

The public must be assured that the Department of Community Safety is engaging the relevant stakeholders in finalising the status of Gauteng Traffic Wardens as Peace Officers in terms of Section 334 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977 so that they can continue to provide the necessary support for law enforcement agencies in executing their duties. More than 8000 Gauteng Traffic Wardens (GTWs) have been recruited to work with other law enforcement agencies, to intensify police visibility through 24-hour patrols. These operations aim to ensure the safety and protection of both private property and state-owned infrastructure across the province. 

The Gauteng Traffic Wardens (GTWs) actively participate in joint law enforcement operations under the supervision of the South African Police Service (SAPS), Gauteng Traffic Police (GTP), and various Metro Police Departments (MPDs), among others. Through these coordinated efforts, the wardens have played a crucial role in enhancing public safety and maintaining law and order across the province. 
To date, they have assisted in the arrest of suspects involved in serious crimes such as armed robbery, theft, vandalism and damage to state infrastructure, drug dealing, and the possession of unlicensed firearms amongst others.  

In addition, the wardens continue to contribute to operations addressing illegal mining activities and supporting interventions linked to GenderBased Violence and Femicide (GBVF) cases. Their growing presence and collaboration with other law enforcement agencies underscore Gauteng’s commitment to building safer and more secure communities. 

The provincial government continues to implement innovative measures to fight crime in our communities. This is to ensure the livelihood Gauteng residents and their prosperity. Therefore, it is important to note that safety remains a shared responsibility. Members of the public are urged to collaborate with and support law enforcement officers in their efforts to root out criminal elements in our communities. 

While the Gauteng Provincial Government recognizes the progress outlined in strengthening law enforcement efforts, we remain mindful of the complex and dangerous environment in which our officers operate daily. In this regard, the provincial government notes with concern a recent incident involving members of the Gauteng Traffic Wardens (GTWs) while on duty. Five (5) GTWs reported for duty at Germiston SAPS and were deployed on foot patrol for visible policing in Germiston CBD on the 15th of October 2025. During their patrol, a robbery incident occurred at Big O Scrap Metal on Charles Street, Georgetown, where an unknown suspect opened fire on the officers. 

Warden Vinchenzo Lodewyk sustained a gunshot wound to his right leg and was immediately transported to a medical facility for treatment. A case of attempted murder has been opened at Germiston SAPS, and investigations are currently underway. 

The provincial government condemns this senseless act of violence in the strongest possible terms. 


MAKEKASIGREAT©®™ @KASIBC_AFRICA