OFFICIAL LAUNCH OF THE PRINCE MANGOSUTHU BUTHELEZI FOUNDATION OFFICES

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OFFICIAL LAUNCH OF THE PRINCE MANGOSUTHU BUTHELEZI FOUNDATION OFFICES


Durban – The Trustees of Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi Foundation is honoured to announce that the Foundation’s Offices will officially open its doors to the public on Saturday, 30 August 2025.

The Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi Foundation aims to preserve the enduring legacy of the late HRH Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi. A legacy of a lifelong commitment to servant leadership, education, community development, and the preservation of our cultural heritage.


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The official opening of the Foundation’s Offices will bring together leaders, dignitaries, and members of the community, just days after Shenge’s birthday, to celebrate the vision and legacy of one of South Africa’s greatest statesmen.

The Chairperson of the Foundation, Hon Velenkosini Hlabisa MP, will preside over the official opening, and deliver the keynote address.

Venue: Prince Mangosuthu Foundation Offices, Signal Hill, Durban Date: Saturday, 30 August 2025
Time: 11:30 for 12:00

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121 DOCKETS RETURNED POLITICAL KILLINGS TASK TEAM

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121 DOCKETS RETURNED POLITICAL KILLINGS TASK TEAM 

The Minister of Police, Professor Firoz Cachalia, notes the statement made by the National Commissioner of Police, General Masemola on the sidelines of the 27th INTERPOL African Regional Conference, regarding the return of 121 dockets to the Political Killings Task Team. This follows the allegations by the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Commissioner that dockets had been taken from the Task Team. 

Shortly after his appointment, Professor Cachalia requested the National Commissioner to furnish him with a detailed report on the Task Team - a report which is yet to be submitted. 

On the 13th of July 2025, the President of the Republic of South Africa, Mr Cyril Ramaphosa, announced the establishment of a Judicial Commission of Inquiry to probe the allegations made by the Provincial Commissioner concerning the Task Team and other related matters. 

In response to the statement made by the National Commissioner, Professor Cachalia stated the following: “I was appointed by the President to ensure the integrity of the SAPS during this difficult time and build public trust in this vitally important organisation. I recognise that the allegations made in relation to the Political Killings Task Team are of immense public interest. 

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The Political Killings Task Team is at the centre of the allegations made by the Provincial Commissioner and will be dealt with by the Commission. It is a concern therefore that steps are being taken in relation to this matter before the Commission has had a chance to investigate the issues surrounding the Task Team. I have requested the National Commissioner to submit his report without further delay.”

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NEW MAYOR FOR BEAUFORT WEST

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NEW MAYOR FOR BEAUFORT WEST 

After recent turmoil that has disrupted Beaufort West, the DA is proud to announce the election of Gina Duimpies as new DA Mayor of the Municipality at today’s Council meeting. 

Gina was elected unopposed.

Having 30 years of service as a police captain, she brings valuable leadership experience and a steady hand to municipal governance. Since July 2024 she has served as a Ward Councillor and Deputy Mayor, before serving as Acting Mayor over the last two months.

With the recent election of the DA’s Elvico Links as the new Speaker and now Mayor Duimpies, restoration is on the horizon for Beaufort West.

Residents bore the brunt of the recent political sabotage, but that ends, now.

With her proven track record of public service, Gina – together with the new DA caucus – will provide stability, uninterrupted service delivery and continuity in moving the municipality forward.

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THE UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND HONOURS MINISTER BLADE NZIMANDE

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THE UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND HONOURS MINISTER BLADE NZIMANDE

On Tuesday, 26 August 2025, the University of Zululand  hosted a historic ceremony which saw the unveiling and naming of three world class buildings.

These include a newly constructed Engineering building, new 442 beds, the refurbished Madiba House and the Richards Bay Lodge.

One of the highlights of the ceremony included the *naming of the Engineering department at the Richards Bay campus in honour of the current Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Prof. Blade Nzimande.

The University of Zululand decided to honour Minister Nzimande for his *“contribution to education and development.

Expressing his gratitude at this gesture, Minister Nzimande indicated how humbled he was and that he never imagined that “as a boy from Dambuza, he would ever have his name inscribed on the building of a university.” 

Minister Nzimande also participated in the naming of the other two buildings. The one building was named after South Africa’s globally recognised icon and first democratic President, *Mr. Nelson Mandela* and the other was named after *Mr. Vuyani Cyril Gamede*, a celebrated and pioneering black engineer and former Chairperson of the Council of University of Zululand.

Delivering the keynote address at this ceremony, Minister Nzimande stated that “As government, our investments in infrastructure are not just about expanding access and creating a conducive world-class environment where students can learn and innovate.

We also hope that these investments will inspire our students and academics to not simply see themselves as consumers of the knowledge that is produced by others, but to also see themselves as knowledge producers in their own right.

This of course resonates with your purpose- statement as a university that of positioning yourself as ‘A Node for African Thought’.”

Highlighting the importance of having an engineering department in the Mhlathuze District, Minister Nzimande stated that “Under apartheid, black people were not allowed to study engineering and were given the type of education that sought to prepare them for subservient roles in society. It is therefore important that we share this history with our young people so that they can have a deeper appreciation for the opportunities they now enjoy.

Furthermore, as the host of the largest aluminum smelter in the Southern Hemisphere, Mhlathuze plays a critical role in the facilitation of export of coal and metals, and the operation of the world's largest dedicated coal export terminal.

Through the Richards Bay port, this District is making a significant contribution in the area of minerals and metals, chemicals, and agro-processing, all of which are key drivers of local economic development, job creation, skills development, technology transfer, and international trade.

To maintain and enhance these economic advantages and to increasingly use them to address the economic needs communities in this District will require new technological know-how and skills and some of the most important competencies reside in the engineering field.

Therefore, your decision to build this Engineering department in this particular district is profoundly visionary."

Minister Nzimande also used the occasion to appeal to the students and broader university community to look after the newly built buildings and urged them “to never forget that these new buildings are for you and future generations, and you have a shared responsibility to make sure that they are well looked after. This is to make sure that, in a few years from now, the children of this area who are still in primary and high school can also come here to pursue their academic dreams.”

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Hundreds of beds without the right linen at Baragwanath Hospital

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Hundreds of beds without the right linen at Baragwanath Hospital 

An astounding 860 beds at the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital (CHBH) do not have a full set of linen - this increases the infection risk, is undignified and uncomfortable for patients, it delays bed turnaround times, and it increases the burden on nursing and cleaning staff.

This is disclosed by Gauteng Health MEC Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko in a written reply to my questions in the Gauteng Legislature.

According to the MEC, each hospital bed should have a minimum of five full sets per linen category to allow for rotational use (on bed, in laundry, in storage, in transit, and in contingency stock).

The linen categories are as follows:

• Flat sheets

• Fitted sheets

• Blankets

• Pillowcases

• Counterpanes/bedcovers

• Patient gowns/pyjamas

Each bed should have 2 sheets (1 fitted, 1 flat), a blanket, pillowcase, a counterpane or bedcover, and one patient gown/pyjama per day.

There should ideally be 14 440 stocks of each linen category for the 2888 beds at the hospital, but whereas there are 14 902 flat sheets and 17 524 blankets, there are zero (0) fitted sheets, and only 10 239 pyjamas, 4517 counterpanes, and 1272 pillowcases.

The department says that about 650 beds have only one sheet "due to rotation pressure and supply constraints".

This confirms what I saw when I visited the hospital last month - see photos here, and here.

I wonder how they cope with no fitted sheets and only 1272 pillowcases for 2888 beds.

Previously, the department denied any linen shortage, but now it admits the severe shortage at CHBH. They blame obsolete laundry machines, delays in finalising a bulk linen purchase, a high patient load which accelerates linen wear and usage, and linen losses due to damage and delays in washing soiled items.

They say efforts are being made to get emergency stock, and the hospital expects full linen adequacy by the first quarter of next year "contingent on tender conclusion and funding flow".

This is not good enough. Of particular concern is the risk of infection, which is already high with 1796 hospital-acquired infections at CHBH out of 31 985 admissions last year.

It should not take six months to buy more linen. The inability to fix this simple problem shows incredibly poor management.

The DA will continue to expose linen shortages by visiting hospitals and asking follow up questions in the Legislature which hopefully force them to resolve it.

A DA-run administration would ensure adequate linen stocks and reassess the reliance on inefficient and unreliable provincial laundries, with more use of cost-efficient private laundries to ensure that hospitals always have clean linen.

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PRESIDENT CYRIL RAMAPHOSA ADDRESS AT THE UNITED NATIONS POPULATIONS FUND AND GLOBAL LEADERS NETWORK ON INVESTING IN PEACE : HEALTH FOR ADOLESCENT YOUTH AND WOMEN AT THE TICAD SUMMIT

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PRESIDENT CYRIL RAMAPHOSA ADDRESS AT THE  UNITED NATIONS POPULATIONS FUND AND GLOBAL LEADERS NETWORK ON  INVESTING IN PEACE : HEALTH FOR ADOLESCENT YOUTH AND WOMEN AT THE TICAD SUMMIT


Excellencies, distinguished Heads of State and Government,
Acting Executive Director of UNFPA Diene Keita,
Honourable Members of Parliament,
Development Partners and Agencies,
Partners from civil society,
Friends from the private sector,
 
It is an honour to stand before you as the chair of the Global Leaders Network for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health, alongside fellow members Ethiopia and Nigeria. 
 
The Global Leaders Network is a coalition of heads of state and government united by the conviction that the health, dignity and potential of women, children and adolescents are the cornerstones of a fair, prosperous and peaceful world.
 
The reality that we must confront is that too many women still die in childbirth of preventable causes. 
 
Too many children and adolescents still suffer and die from illnesses we know how to prevent or treat. 
 
These are not inevitable tragedies.
 
Just as every avoidable death is a policy and administrative failure, every life saved is the result of political will.
 
The Global Leaders Network commits at the highest political level to keeping the voices of the most vulnerable alive in the halls of power. 
 
The moral imperative is clear: no woman, child or adolescent should die of preventable causes.
 
We must stand firm against the reversals we are witnessing in sexual and reproductive health and rights. 
 
We believe that every woman has autonomy over her sexuality and reproductive choices. Every adolescent should get comprehensive sexual education. Every person should be free from sexually transmitted diseases. 
 
To translate conviction into action, the Global Leaders Network has identified three priorities for immediate and sustained focus.
 
First, as countries advance universal health coverage, we must place women, children and adolescents at the centre of its design and implementation. 
 
Health services need to be safe, effective, compassionate and responsive to the lived realities of those who need them most. 
 
Our second priority is to increase investment in women’, children’s and adolescents’ health. 
 
As official development assistance is cut, many countries are pursuing domestic resource mobilisation as a sustainable health financing solution. 
 
However, we must continue to foster the principle of solidarity through multilateral financing solutions. This includes the consideration of a gap financing mechanism to address the needs of countries and communities most affected by the withdrawal of official development assistance. 
 
Our third priority is to uphold sexual and reproductive health rights. 
 
The data is clear: a lack of access to safe abortion leads to higher incidents of deaths, costly complications and permanent damage leading to infertility. 
 
I call on governments, financing institutions, development partners, civil society and the private sector to push forward towards 2030 with the following convictions:
 
Firstly, reaffirm and protect funding for women’s, children’s, and adolescents’ health as a core pillar of development cooperation, even amid shifting global priorities.
 
Secondly, integrate health into broader development and climate strategies, recognising that resilient health systems are essential for adaptation, recovery and long-term sustainability.
 
Thirdly, continue to invest in innovation and digital health solutions that bridge gaps in access, particularly for rural and marginalised communities.
 
Finally, ensure accountability, so that commitments translate into measurable improvements in survival, well-being and equity.
 
The cost of inaction on these issues will be counted not only in lives lost, but in futures diminished, communities destabilised and economic opportunities foregone. 
 
But the benefits of bold, coordinated action will build social and economic prosperity for generations.
 
Women, children and adolescents must be our priority, for they represent the future that we are all working so hard to secure.
 
I thank you.

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EFF SUBMISSIONS DURING THE AD HOC COMMITTEE ON THE ALLEGATIONS OF LIEUTENANT GENERAL NHLANHLA MKHWANAZI

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EFF SUBMISSIONS DURING THE AD HOC COMMITTEE ON THE ALLEGATIONS OF LIEUTENANT GENERAL NHLANHLA MKHWANAZI

A. INTRODUCTION

1. On Monday, 18 August 2025, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) participated in the second sitting of the Ad Hoc Committee established to investigate the allegations made by Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi. The meeting commenced at 11:00AM and concluded after a full day of deliberations, ending in the evening shortly after 8:00PM.

2. The Committee’s task was to consider and adopt Terms of Reference that would guide its work. The EFF had submitted its written proposals on 8 August 2025, in line with the agreement of the Committee, ensuring that its inputs were available for all members to engage with during the drafting process.

3. This pamphlet provides a detailed account of the EFF’s submissions, how the Party engaged the proposals of other political parties, and the interventions made to protect the integrity of the Committee’s work.

B. EFF SUBMISSIONS: SUBSTANTIVE PROPOSALS

4. The EFF’s submissions were substantive, comprehensive, and rooted in the principles of accountability, independence, and transparency. All substantive proposals were accepted by the majority of the Committee. The following key amendments and insertions were advanced:

4.1. Expand the scope of the enquiry: The Terms of Reference must not only address the allegations made by Lt Gen Mkhwanazi but also investigate systemic governance failures within the South African Police Service (SAPS), Metro Police divisions, the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), judiciary, and correctional services.

4.2. Collusion between state and criminal syndicates: The Committee must specifically probe allegations of collusion between politicians, law enforcement officials, prosecutors, judges, and organised criminal syndicates.

4.3. Accountability of organs of state: Insert a clause allowing the Committee to investigate any failure by organs of state or members of the executive to comply with their legal obligations and to recommend remedial action.

4.4. Allegations against Members of Parliament: Ensure the scope explicitly covers allegations made against Members of Parliament linked to criminal syndicates.

4.5. Witnesses: Extend the framework to allow incarcerated persons to be called as witnesses and to provide that all witnesses may have legal assistance either privately or through Legal Aid.

4.6. Independent evidence leader: Insist on the appointment of external senior counsel with proven experience to serve as evidence leader, rather than relying on Parliamentary Legal Services, which lack independence and credibility.

4.7. Transparency and public participation: Strengthen provisions to ensure meetings are open to the public, broadcast on Parliament’s YouTube channel and other platforms, while balancing this with the need to protect classified or sensitive information.

4.8. Handling of Classified Documents:

C. ENGAGEMENT WITH OTHER POLITICAL PARTIES

5. The EFF engaged the submissions of other political parties constructively, supporting those that strengthened the work of the Committee and opposing those that were misguided or opportunistic.
ANC Proposals – Change of mandate: The ANC proposed replacing the word investigate with enquire, thereby diluting the Committee’s powers.

EFF objection – This was firmly rejected. The National Assembly resolution clearly mandated the Committee to investigate. Any attempt to weaken this language undermines Parliament’s resolution and the constitutional responsibility to hold the executive to account.

ANC proposal – Methodology and witnesses: The ANC proposed that the Committee’s approach and witnesses be determined primarily on the basis of Lt Gen Mkhwanazi’s evidence.

EFF objection: The EFF argued this would narrow the scope improperly. While his evidence was the trigger, the enquiry must examine the broader systemic crisis affecting policing, prosecution, and governance.

ANC Proposal – Parliamentary Legal Services as evidence leaders: The ANC argued that Parliamentary Legal Services should serve as evidence leaders, citing efficiency and cost-saving.

EFF objection – The EFF rejected this on grounds of independence and impartiality.

Parliamentary staff are structurally accountable to the Speaker and the ANC Chief Whip. Their involvement would compromise credibility. The Committee agreed instead that external senior counsel with relevant expertise must be appointed.

The EFF also noted that while some proposals from the DA tended to repeat or over expand on matters already covered, they were not objectionable. Proposals from MKP were largely administrative in nature and immaterial to the substantive issues except the matter of handling classified information.

Where information submitted to the Committee points to classified documents that conceal or relate to criminality within the scope of the enquiry, the Committee must assist with the necessary legal processes to have such documents declassified.

Parliament, as an organ of state mandated to hold the executive accountable, cannot allow classification to be used as a shield against exposure of wrongdoing. The Committee must therefore be empowered to facilitate declassification in a lawful manner so that all relevant evidence can be interrogated transparently and thoroughly.

D. DEFENCE OF PROPER PROCESS

6. During the course of the 10-hour meeting, an attempt was made to adopt the Terms of Reference without members having sight of the final consolidated document.

The EFF intervened decisively, objecting to such a move. The Party insisted that no Terms of Reference should be adopted unless every member had read, interrogated, and understood the final draft.
7. This objection carried the support of other political parties, and the Chairperson had to concede. The EFF reminded the Committee that the credibility of its work rests on thoroughness and fairness, particularly given the magnitude of the allegations before it.

E.OUTCOME OF THE MEETING

8. The outcome of the 18 August 2025 sitting was clear:
8.1. No Terms of Reference were adopted.
8.2. A further urgent meeting will be convened to consider and adopt a final draft.
8.3. The Committee resolved to secure the services of external senior counsel as evidence leader, in line with the EFF’s proposal.
8.4. Members raised concerns, led by the EFF, about the poor quality of back-office support, which reinforced the need for independent legal expertise.

F.CONCLUSION AND CALL TO THE PUBLIC
9. The Economic Freedom Fighters reaffirm their commitment to engaging the Ad Hoc Committee with seriousness and determination. The Committee has a historic responsibility to investigate the allegations raised by Lt Gen Mkhwanazi, which touch on organised crime, political interference, and systemic governance failures.

10. The EFF calls on all members of society to take active interest in the work of the Committee. The meetings are open and broadcast live on Parliament’s YouTube channel and selected media platforms. Citizens must follow these proceedings, as the outcomes will have significant implications for policing, justice, and accountability in South Africa.

11. The EFF will continue to play its role without fear or favour, ensuring that the
truth is brought to light and that accountability is upheld.

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