
South African president suspends police minister accused of colluding with criminal syndicates
Mr Ramaphosa's actions follow allegations made by a top police official in the KwaZulu-Natal province, Gen Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, that Senzo Mchunu and deputy police commissioner Shadrack Sibiya had interfered with sensitive investigations.
Mr Ramaphosa said the probe will be headed by a judge, and announced Firoz Cachalia as the acting minister of police.
'The commission will investigate the role of current or former senior officials in certain institutions who may have aided or abetted the alleged criminal activity, failed to act on credible intelligence or internal warnings, or benefited financially or politically from a syndicate's operations,' Mr Ramaphosa said during a televised address Sunday.
During a press briefing last Sunday, Mr Mkhwanazi also alleged that Mr Mchunu and Mr Sibiya disbanded a crucial crime unit tasked with investigating repeated politically motivated killings in the province after it was revealed that crime syndicates were behind the killings.
He alleged that an investigation by the unit showed that some 'politicians, law enforcement, SAPS (South African Police Service), metro police and correctional services, prosecutors, judiciary' were being 'controlled by drug cartels and as well as businesspeople.'
The investigation would include some of the country's crime and justice agencies, including the National Prosecuting Authority and the State Security Agency, Ramaphosa said.
Most opposition parties on Sunday criticised Mr Ramaphosa for not firing Mr Mchunu instead of placing him on a leave of absence.
'This was an opportunity to take South Africans into confidence and to deal with these issues decisively, instead he calls for a commission of inquiry and expects South Africans to be patient when people are dying on a daily basis,' said Mr Nhlamulo Ndhlela, spokesperson of official opposition MK Party.
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Constance Marten was a disciple of infamous Christian preacher, TB Joshua, who was accused of rape and violence in a BBC News spent four months at Joshua's Synagogue Church of All Nations in Nigeria as a teenager.A fellow disciple, who knew Marten when she was at the church, told the BBC it was "a place of torture" and sexual assault. The BBC has no reason to believe Marten was subjected to any abuse 38, has been found guilty of gross negligence manslaughter following the death of her baby, This story contains descriptions of physical and sexual abuse Now the retrial is over BBC News can report Marten, who comes from an aristocratic family with royal connections, was a disciple at the Synagogue Church of All Nations (Scoan) from September 2006, when she was aged lived at a compound while at Scoan, one of the world's biggest Christian evangelical BBC Eye investigation, published last year, found evidence of widespread abuse and torture by Joshua. A televangelist who had an immense global following, Joshua died in part of the investigation, dozens of former members alleged atrocities by Joshua, including rape and forced abortions, spanning almost 20 was taken to Scoan by her mother, Virginie De Selliers, after leaving school. She remained in Lagos, Nigeria, to become a disciple when her mother returned to the to the BBC, Angie said she shared a dormitory with Marten while the pair were at the church."It's no wonder she just ended up distrusting normal institutions - because clearly, something broke within her at some point," she said. Joshua had a worldwide following among some evangelical Christians thanks to videos of his "miracles" posted online by the church. 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Angie, who was a Scoan disciple for 10 years, recalls Marten as being "bright, witty, compassionate, funny, kind, and very independent".She told the BBC how the church was "a place of torture, psychological abuse, physical abuse, spiritual abuse, and sexual abuse" under Joshua's said: "I wouldn't wish that experience on anyone and I feel very sad that she [Marten] was taken there in the first place."Unlike some Scoan disciples, who remained under Joshua's control for years, Marten was thrown out after a few months and returned to the UK, where she went to Leeds University to study for a degree in Arabic and Middle Eastern messages seen by BBC News suggest she was still affected by her experiences in Nigeria years later. In October 2012, she got in touch with Angie via Facebook Messenger."I haven't spoken to anyone about what happened at the synagogue," Marten wrote. 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