
‘Police are the chief criminal syndicate': Saps R120bn budget criticised by MPs
MPs have sharply criticised the police's budget, with several voicing concerns over persistent corruption in the South African Police Service (Saps).
On Friday, Police Minister Senzo Mchunu presented the department's budget for the 2025-2026 financial year at the Good Hope Chamber in Cape Town.
The presentation was followed by a debate in which MPs scrutinised both the spending plan and annual performance targets.
Mchunu tables Saps budget
In his address, Mchunu highlighted the police's key priorities, which include reducing the murder rate, tackling gang violence, addressing gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) and rooting out corruption.
To support these goals, he said several critical enablers had been identified to bolster the crime-fighting strategy.
These include strengthening crime intelligence, enhancing forensic services and upgrading infrastructure such as police stations.
'This budget is about improved policing,' Mchunu told MPs.
The total allocation for Saps stands at R120.89 billion.
ALSO READ: 'No arrest warrant for police crime boss Fannie Masemola', IDAC says
Specific allocations include R219.2 million to secure the G20 conference in November 2025, R400 million for the 2026 local government elections and R34.8 million to cover the appointment of an additional deputy minister.
Additionally, R150 million is being reallocated from Saps' operational budget to the Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation (DPCI), also known as the Hawks.
Mchunu also announced the recruitment of 5 500 new police trainees in January 2026.
'Additionally, 250 police trainees with qualifications in law, forensic investigation and information technology will be placed in the directorate [Hawks] upon completion of their training.'
Watch the budget vote debate below:
The minister emphasised the need for targeted, intelligence-led deployments in high-crime zones across four provinces, including Gauteng and the Western Cape.
He highlighted that R85 million was earmarked for the top 30-plus five high-contact crime stations.
Community engagement efforts will receive R28 million for community policing forums (CPFs) and R8.5 million for initiatives such as imbizos.
A significant R1.6 billion is allocated to combat GBVF.
Infrastructure investment includes R670 million for constructing and upgrading police stations, R20 million for procuring and converting vehicles to enhance mobile service centres and R45 million for day-to-day maintenance of existing facilities.
Saps budget criticised
While ANC MP Erald Cloete expressed support for the budget, uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party MP David Skosana rejected the spending plan, saying that South Africans were being 'betrayed by the very same institutions meant to safeguard them'.
He accused both Saps and the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (Ipid) of failing in their mandates.
Skosana likened the country's crime levels to a war zone and condemned the lack of accountability.
'It is a chilling indictment of a police service that has lost control,' he said on Friday.
He warned that if the budget is passed, it would amount to a 'death sentence' for citizens.
Skosana also said Ipid's annual performance targets, particularly regarding rape and corruption cases, were 'laughable', 'inadequate' and reflected what he described as an under-resourced institution.
He highlighted Ipid's backlog of 10 500 cases and slammed its proposed R428.6 million budget.
'Only R9 million was allocated for forensic investigators. We are essentially throwing a glass of water on a forest fire. [It is] pure strategic failure.'
READ MORE: Police sergeant arrested in Kamogelo Baukudi kidnapping case issued suspension letter
The MK party member further took aim at Saps' administrative budget.
'R72 billion is set aside for administration, much of which goes to a bloated management structure and a system that seems more interested in sustaining itself than saving the public.'
Moreover, Skosana condemned the lack of a concrete strategy to fight internal corruption.
'The so-called lifestyle audits mentioned in the budget are nothing more than a PR exercise.
'Officers implicated in criminality continue to rise through the ranks, protected by political connections and institutionalised silence.'
He called for urgent action to reduce case and DNA backlogs, hire more officers and tackle corruption effectively.
'Chief criminal syndicate'
Democratic Alliance MP Lisa‐Maré Schickerling also criticised the budget, calling it 'obscene' in the face of the police's declining credibility and rising crime statistics.
'One must ask, are we funding public safety or institutional failure? The reality on the ground is devastating,' she said.
Schickerling raised alarm over South Africa's high GBV rates and Ipid's plan to only address 35 rape cases this year.
'That's not a plan, that's an admission of defeat and a resignation letter addressed to every woman that the system has failed.'
Despite her concerns, she acknowledged there were some positives in the proposed budget.
EFF MP Leigh‐Ann Mathys also rejected the budget, expressing scepticism that it would lead to any real reduction in crime.
'Minister, even if we add your President [Cyril] Ramaphosa's Phala Phala dollars, it is not going to help,' she said.
READ MORE: Corruption crisis deepens within Gauteng police force
Mathys warned that the reported dysfunction in Saps was a 'tip of the iceberg'.
'If we continue down this path, South Africa is going to lead the world in committing mob justice purely because the police are the chief criminal syndicate,' the EFF MP said.
'We have a history of high-ranking Saps officials caught with their hands in the cookie jar of corruption,' Mathys added.
IFP MP Russel Cebekhulu echoed concerns about police corruption, referring to recent arrests of senior crime intelligence officers, including the division's head, Dumisani Khumalo.
'This undermines public trust and threatens the integrity of policing in South Africa,' Cebekhulu said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

TimesLIVE
an hour ago
- TimesLIVE
Leaders of growing Brics group gather for Rio summit
Leaders of the growing Brics group of developing nations were set to gather in Rio de Janeiro on Sunday, calling for reform of traditional Western institutions while presenting the bloc as a defender of multilateralism in an increasingly fractured world. With forums such as the G7 and G20 groups of major economies hamstrung by divisions and the disruptive 'America First' approach of US President Donald Trump, expansion of the Brics has opened new space for diplomatic co-ordination. 'In the face of the resurgence of protectionism, it is up to emerging nations to defend the multilateral trade regime and reform the international financial architecture,' Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva told a Brics business forum on Saturday. Brics nations now represent more than half the world's population and 40% of its economic output, Lula noted. The Brics group gathered leaders from Brazil, Russia, India and China at its first summit in 2009. The bloc later added South Africa and last year included Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates as full members. This is the first leaders' summit to include Indonesia. 'The vacuum left by others ends up being filled almost instantly by the Brics,' said a Brazilian diplomat who asked not to be named. Though the G7 still concentrates vast power, the source added, 'it doesn't have the predominance it once did'. However, there are questions about the shared goals of an increasingly heterogenous Brics group, which has grown to include regional rivals along with major emerging economies. Stealing some thunder from this year's summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping chose to send his prime minister in his place. Russian President Vladimir Putin is attending online due to an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court. Still, many heads of state will gather for discussions at Rio's Museum of Modern Art on Sunday and Monday, including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. Over 30 nations have expressed interest in participating in the Brics, either as full members or partners. Brazil, which also hosts the UN climate summit in November, has seized on both gatherings to highlight how seriously developing nations are tackling climate change, while Trump has slammed the brakes on US climate initiatives. Both China and the UAE signalled in meetings with Brazilian finance minister Fernando Haddad in Rio that they plan to invest in a proposed Tropical Forests Forever Facility, according to two sources with knowledge of the discussions about funding conservation of endangered forests around the world. Expansion of the Brics has added diplomatic weight to the gathering, which aspires to speak for developing nations across the Global South, strengthening calls for reforming global institutions such as the UN Security Council and the International Monetary Fund. The growth of the bloc has also increased the challenges to reaching consensus on contentious geopolitical issues. Ahead of the summit, negotiators struggled to find shared language for a joint statement about the bombardment of Gaza, the Israel-Iran conflict and a proposed reform of the Security Council, said two of the sources, who requested anonymity to speak openly. To overcome differences among African nations regarding the continent's proposed representative to a reformed Security Council, the group agreed to endorse seats for Brazil and India while leaving open which country should represent Africa's interests, a person familiar with the talks told Reuters. The Brics will also continue their thinly veiled criticism of Trump's US tariff policy. At an April ministerial meeting, the bloc expressed concern about 'unjustified unilateral protectionist measures, including the indiscriminate increase of reciprocal tariffs'.

The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Africa Energy Forum presents a unique opportunity for African collaboration
In the rural village of Gwanda, Zimbabwe, a mother walks several kilometres each day to find firewood so she can cook for her children. She's never had access to reliable electricity, and her story is not unique. Across Africa, 600 million people still live without energy access – a fact that affects every aspect of their lives. The former United Nations Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, summarised Africa's biggest challenge when he said: 'Energy is the golden thread that connects economic growth, increased social equity, and an environment that allows the world to thrive'. Without electricity, communities cannot run clinics, power schools, or create jobs – all of which are fundamental to dignity and development. That is why I attended the Africa Energy Forum in Cape Town recently, a milestone that marked the first time in the event's 27-year history that it was hosted in South Africa. This year's theme, 'Africa United', could not be more fitting. As the global investment meeting for Africa's power, energy, infrastructure and industrial sectors, it was attended by stakeholders who hold the key to accelerating energy access - African presidents, ministers, policymakers, continental executives, the World Bank, African Development Bank and DFIs. With South Africa chairing the G20 this year, the continent must use the momentum of the Africa Energy Forum (AEF) and the G20 Summit to amplify a cohesive African voice in global energy governance. As geopolitical instability rises, with trade wars and fractured alliances, it's more urgent than ever to ask: Can Africa present a united energy agenda? And can it do so on its terms? To seize this opportunity, Africa must first agree on a set of shared energy priorities. These must include scaling up renewable resources like solar, wind and hydro, where the continent has a competitive advantage, while also affirming the sovereign right to include coal, gas and nuclear in the energy mix where needed. This is not a contradiction, but a necessity. Industrialised countries built their economies using all available energy sources. Africa must be afforded the same space to grow. Some of the critical arguments at this year's event will be around balancing the need for energy access and economic development with plotting a sustainable energy future that includes an abundance of Africa's renewable energy resources. Favourable terms for the financing of African energy projects will also be another important topic of debate. Although there are hundreds of initiatives to ensure the achievement of universal energy access on the continent, more than half the continent still lacks access to modern energy, which is why African energy stakeholders believe that amid the drive for reducing carbon emissions, Africa should have a sovereign right to include coal, gas and nuclear as part of its energy mix in line with how developed nations built their economies. What will the US role be in Africa's energy future? The first Power Africa Summit was launched by former US President Barack Obama in June 2013 as a private sector-led initiative with the ambitious goal of doubling electricity access on the continent. Through USAID, 12 US government agencies implemented Power Africa activities by providing financing and technical assistance to support the power sector in 40 African countries. Though different US administrations advised countries on electricity access for years, Power Africa's approach was different in that it took a demand-driven, transactional approach by reviewing actual transactions between private-sector players like investors, entrepreneurs, and manufacturers, and with governments and then identified obstacles that were preventing transactions from moving forward. A large reason for the success of Power Africa in the past was the power of diplomacy to level the playing field for U.S. investments in the energy sector. US President Trump and his administration announced that Power Africa would be dismantled, after more than a decade of successful work on the continent. With almost all of Power Africa's programmes listed for termination, the diminishing role of the US in Africa's energy sector opens opportunities for new alliances and greater intra-African collaboration. Energy financing must be favourable The challenge for Africa is that it needs to industrialise and electrify its economy, but at the same time, it needs the finances to do so in a sustainable way. Africa has also been most severely affected by climate change, and so its infrastructure development needs to be climate-resilient. Most African nations don't need an energy transition, but energy accessibility. Many African countries are grappling with rising inflation, which has also impacted the amount of developmental finance available to African nations. But America may want to maintain its presence and footprint in Africa's energy sector, especially as China seeks to play a leading role in the continent's infrastructure development. Despite the challenging global environment, Africa needs its member states and voices to unite with a collective vision to fund Africa's energy revolution with international financing mechanisms that are just. After all, Africa is responsible for less than 3% of the world's carbon emissions and home to massive, unlocked energy potential, while also being home to 1.2 billion youth aged between 15 to 24 years that account for 16% of the global population (according to the UN). Greg Nott is Director Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc


The Citizen
3 hours ago
- The Citizen
Nquthu residents march overjobs and foreign traders
Hundreds of Nquthu residents, including informal traders, took to the streets last Friday in a mass protest. They are demanding that foreign nationals occupying local businesses and homes be verified and deported. The march, organised under the banner of 'March and March, Nquthu, Until We Win', began along the R68 and ended at the Nquthu municipal offices, where a memorandum of grievances was handed over. The protesters claimed that over 70% of trading sites in town are now run by foreign nationals, some of whom also occupy RDP houses, while local residents remain unemployed. Informal traders, street vendors and hair salon workers were among those who joined the march. 'There are no jobs for locals, not even grass-cutting jobs,' said a visibly frustrated municipal chief whip, Cllr Mbongeni Mnguni, who received the memorandum. 'It is unacceptable that job opportunities meant for unskilled residents are now being taken by foreign nationals.' March leaders Zipho Hlatshwayo and Thandazani Buthelezi accused foreigners of introducing drugs to the area and being involved in gender-based violence, illegal trading and fraud. They called on Home Affairs and the SAPS to conduct verification raids in both town and surrounding villages. 'We are here to remind the municipality of its bylaws. If they don't have them, now is the time to draft them,' said Buthelezi. 'This is our town and we must protect it.' Mnguni promised to pass the memorandum to the municipality. They will meet with the relevant stakeholders within seven days to seek a resolution. HAVE YOUR SAY: Like our Facebook page, follow us on Twitter and Instagram or email us at [email protected]. Add us on WhatsApp 071 277 1394. At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!