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PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results: Tuesday, 29 July 2025
PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results: Tuesday, 29 July 2025

The Citizen

time2 hours ago

  • General
  • The Citizen

PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results: Tuesday, 29 July 2025

R122 million in jackpots are up for grabs! Here are your PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results for 29 July 2025. Get the PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results as soon as they are drawn on The Citizen, so you can rest easy and check your tickets with confidence. Estimated jackpots for Tuesday, 29 July 2025: PowerBall jackpot: R100 million guaranteed. PowerBall Plus jackpot: R22 million estimated. PowerBall and PowerBall Plus results for Tuesday, 29 July 2025: PowerBall: 00, 00, 00, 00, 00. Powerball: 00. PowerBall Plus: 00, 00, 00, 00, 00. Powerball: 00. The winning PowerBall numbers will appear after the draw. Usually within 10 minutes of the draw. You might need to refresh the page to see the updated results. While great care has been taken to ensure accuracy, The Citizen cannot take responsibility for any error in the PowerBall or PowerBall Plus results. We suggest verifying the numbers on the National Lottery website. How much does it cost to play PowerBall? Lottery outlets close at 8.30pm on the day of a draw, which happens at 9pm. The terms and conditions may differ from other service outlets. Visit for more information. You can find the historical winning numbers for PowerBall and Lotto draws here. How much does it cost to play PowerBall? PowerBall entries cost R5 per board including VAT. PowerBall Plus costs an additional R2.50 per board. You can also play PowerBall on selected banking apps (T's & C's apply). Visit and go to the How to Play section to find out more.

PowerBall draw jackpot a GUARANTEED R100 million on Tuesday, 29 July
PowerBall draw jackpot a GUARANTEED R100 million on Tuesday, 29 July

The South African

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • The South African

PowerBall draw jackpot a GUARANTEED R100 million on Tuesday, 29 July

South Africans across the country are dreaming big as the PowerBall and PowerBall Plus jackpots climb to a combined R122 million ahead of the highly anticipated draw on Tuesday, 29 July. National lottery operator ITHUBA confirmed that the PowerBall jackpot is a g uaranteed R100 million, while the PowerBall Plus prize is expected to reach R22 million. 'To win, you need to play,' ITHUBA reminded hopefuls, encouraging participation through authorised retailers, online platforms, and mobile channels. The announcement has sparked a wave of enthusiasm among seasoned players and first-time ticket buyers alike, with many eyeing the life-changing potential of becoming an overnight multimillionaire. This massive prize pool comes as many households continue to feel the pinch of rising costs, making the prospect of a win even more appealing. For some, it represents a chance to escape financial pressure; for others, it's simply a moment of hope and excitement in uncertain times. The draw, one of the largest of the year, promises to be closely watched across the country. ITHUBA advises all players to purchase tickets before the cutoff time on Tuesday and to play responsibly. Whether it's buying a quick pick or carefully choosing lucky numbers, millions will be watching to see if a new millionaire is crowned. The draw will be broadcast live on Tuesday evening, and results will be available shortly after on official platforms, as well as The South African website. Good luck! Buy your tickets now at your nearest participating retailer, on our website by visiting national using your computer or mobile site, via the National Lottery Mobile App, or participating banks, namely FNB, ABSA, Nedbank, Standard Bank, Capitec, TymeBank and African Bank otherwise dial 120 7529# for USSD. Winners who win R50 000 and above receive free trauma counselling from professional psychologists and financial advice from accredited financial advisors absolutely free. At the same time, winnings are paid tax-free directly into the winner's accounts. The next PowerBall and PowerBall Plus draws will take place on Tuesday, 29 July from 20:58. The PowerBall jackpot draw required players to pick five main numbers from 1 to 50 and one 'PowerBall' number from 1 to 20 for an entry fee of R5.00 per board. Draws take place every Tuesday and Friday. The record prize for any lottery game in South Africa came in the PowerBall when one winner scooped an incredible R232 131 750.69 in the draw held on 19 February 2019. PowerBall Plus is exactly the same as PowerBall but gives players a second chance to win. When buying a PowerBall ticket, players can pay an extra R2.50 per board to enter the PowerBall Plus draw. Odds are the same, while prizes are usually slightly lower. It was introduced on 28 November 2015 by the National Lottery of South Africa. If you are buying tickets from a lottery outlet, they close at 20:30 on the day of a draw. Players must be 18 years old. Monday: Daily Lotto Tuesday: Daily Lotto + PowerBall and PowerBall Plus Wednesday: Daily Lotto + Lotto, Lotto Plus 1 and Lotto Plus 2 Thursday: Daily Lotto Friday: Daily Lotto + PowerBall and PowerBall Plus Saturday: Daily Lotto + Lotto, Lotto Plus 1 and Lotto Plus 2 Sunday: Daily Lotto For more details and to verify the winning PowerBall and PowerBall Plus numbers, visit the National Lottery website. You must always confirm the official winning numbers on the National Lottery website. We do our best to post the results as accurately as possible, but the National Lottery is the only source you can use to 100% verify the results. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

Cracks in the skills system — allegations of corruption, waste, cover-ups in SA's Setas (Part 1)
Cracks in the skills system — allegations of corruption, waste, cover-ups in SA's Setas (Part 1)

Daily Maverick

time22-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Maverick

Cracks in the skills system — allegations of corruption, waste, cover-ups in SA's Setas (Part 1)

South Africa's Sector Education and Training Authorities have once again landed in the headlines, this time over former higher education minister Nobuhle Nkabane's bungled appointment panel. Allegations ranging from political interference and misleading Parliament, to questionable board appointments have set off a storm of public outrage, legal reviews and parliamentary scrutiny. A look beyond the immediate uproar over former higher education minister Nobuhle Nkabane's bungled appointment panel reveals that South Africa's Sector Education and Training Authorities (Setas) are anything but recent. Long before Nkabane's tenure, these institutions were plagued by governance failures and corruption. Read more: Educated for leadership and engulfed by scandal, Minister Nkabane faces her sternest test. Damning case studies – on the Local Government Seta (LGSeta), the Health and Welfare Seta (HWSeta), and the Service Seta – reveal just how extensively public funds have been misused. LGSeta under fire for tender scandal and millions in wasteful spending The LGSeta has found itself entangled in controversy following a whistle-blower tip-off received by its current CEO, Ineeleng Molete. The whistle-blower, via former board chairperson Phumlani Mntambo, raised serious allegations of corruption, triggering a forensic investigation in 2022. The findings were staggering. Investigators uncovered systemic governance failures, including procurement irregularities linked to a R2.3-billion tender process riddled with noncompliance. The report also cited the irregular appointment of training providers, unauthorised discretionary grant allocations, financial bias and overpayments. Appearing before Parliament's Portfolio Committee on Higher Education in May 2025, Molete confirmed that a criminal case had been opened with the Hawks but said LGSeta was unable to name those implicated while legal proceedings were ongoing. Daily Maverick followed up with LGSeta to understand whether the case was still active. Molete said it is pending further investigation by the Hawks, adding that 'no arrests of individuals have been made by SAPS'. Reports of financial mismanagement didn't end there. In the 2023/24 financial year, LGSeta recorded R39.7-million in fruitless and wasteful expenditure, including R172,000 on trip-related incidentals. Molete defended the spending, explaining that R39,519,356.83 related to discretionary grant contracts that expired on 31 March 2024. 'While funds were disbursed, no money was lost or unnecessarily paid. The initial concern was deemed invalid and has been removed in the current financial year,' he said. He added that R122,800.00 was for learners who had passed away during their programmes. 'Consequently, despite funds having been committed for their development, LGSeta could not fully achieve the intended value for money,' Molete said. Another R104,651.00 had gone to a professor invited on an LGSeta trip as a subject matter expert, while R39,272.13 had been used during an official travel trip. Health and Welfare Sector Education and Training Authority The HWSeta recorded R1.72-million in wasteful expenditure in 2023, including unpaid stipends, accommodation for absent learners, post-resignation salaries and interest on overdue invoices. Irregular spending hit R2.8-million due to inflated purchase orders and payments to unregistered stakeholders, though an internal probe confirmed only R160,000 was formally irregular. HWSeta has opened legal action against organisations that withheld learner stipends, including Afrika Connect (R900,000), Ludziwo Foundation (R469,000), Remmogo VE (R166,000) and Lithala Financial Education (R989,000). Two additional lawsuits loom. Lerong Consulting (Pty) Ltd is suing HWSeta for R823,267 over an alleged contract breach, with legal costs of R800,000, while True Harvest College seeks damages for reputational and financial losses, anticipating R550,000 in legal fees. HWSeta spokesperson Rulleska Singh told Daily Maverick about the disciplinary measures taken against those who signed off on payments to entities not registered with CIPC and the current status of the legal proceedings. 'Where wrongdoing was established, disciplinary proceedings were concluded, resulting in dismissals of responsible personnel… The Lerong Consulting matter remains ongoing, with a trial date yet to be set. The True Harvest College case has a trial date scheduled for 2026,' said Singh. She added: 'When stipend misuse was identified through the organisation's tip-off hotline, immediate action was taken, including referrals to legal representatives and opening cases with the South African Police Service. Of the 302 learners affected by these incidents, 232 have been compensated thus far. Recovery processes continue for all outstanding amounts.' DM

NPA lacking in lottery probe
NPA lacking in lottery probe

The Citizen

time26-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Citizen

NPA lacking in lottery probe

Four ex-bosses 'key players' in looting, Scopa hears. Out of 19 separate matters involving lottery corruption that have been referred to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), only one is currently before a court, with no progress in getting the rest before the courts, parliament heard. Some of the charges, which include fraud, corruption and money laundering, date back to early 2022. This is according to two reports presented to MPs serving on parliament's standing committee on public accounts (Scopa). Those involved in the lottery probe Senior Special Investigating Unit (SIU) officials presented a pared-down progress report with highlights of their investigation to the committee. MPs were also given a more comprehensive 128- page version, which went into detail about what they had uncovered and named people involved. Among those named and referred to the NPA for prosecution are several former National Lotteries Commission (NLC) executives and board members, who oversaw the NLC at a time when it was overwhelmed by corruption. The list of names, headed 'key players in the lottery corruption', is broken into two: 'internal players' and 'external players', consisting of people the SIU has described as 'kingpins', and family and business associates. ALSO READ: SIU is not done with NLC yet, as more corruption allegations emerge Key players The SIU identified four executives and board members as key players in the looting. Former NLC COO Phillemon Letwaba: Last week, Letwaba was included in a Special Tribunal judgment that froze R25 million in assets acquired using plundered lottery funds. Former NLC board chair Alfred Nevhutanda: He used lottery funds to buy a Rolls-Royce and a luxury mansion, among other things. Former NLC board member William Huma: The Special Tribunal recently interdicted Huma from receiving R10 million from the sale of his Waterkloof mansion, which was paid for with lottery money. Former NLC Commissioner Thabang Mampane: Her weekend home on a golf estate was paid for with lottery money. R2 billion in fraud and corruption Members of Scopa listened in silence as the SIU explained in detail how they were currently investigating R2 billion in fraud and corruption. But they were told this amount could increase substantially as the SIU was continually receiving new information about further lottery corruption. 'This amount keeps increasing because we are currently receiving new tip-offs about corruption, as well as uncovering more and more during our investigations,' SIU chief operating officer Leonard Lekgetho told MPs. Gijimani Jim Skosana, an ANC MP, after hearing the extent of the looting, said: 'They were very relaxed, just like they were scooping ice-cream.' So far, the Special Tribunal and the Asset Forfeiture Unit have successfully frozen properties, vehicles and pensions worth almost R122 million. ALSO READ: Lotto heist: SIU almost done with second phase of R1.4bn NLC corruption probe Investigation The SIU has completed two phases of its investigation, with phase one involving R280 million and R247 million in phase two. It has also delivered its first report to President Cyril Ramaphosa. Phase three, which is expected to be completed by 31 December, so far involves R905 million. With new tip-offs coming in, the SIU says this will exceed the R2 billion 'value of contracts under investigation with potential civil litigation' it previously estimated. It has also referred Huma (an advocate), Lesley Ramulifho (an attorney who has been implicated in lottery corruption) and suspended NLC legal head Gugulethu Yako to the Legal Practice Council (LPC). Ramulifho is already in the midst of a disciplinary hearing at the LPC, following a GroundUp complaint against him. The SIU has also referred seven people and 14 companies to the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC), asking for them to be placed on a delinquency list and be barred from registering companies in the future. NOW READ: Accounting firms compiled fraudulent financial statements for NPOs – SIU on NLC corruption

Final audit still not ready nearly two years after 2023 Netball World Cup
Final audit still not ready nearly two years after 2023 Netball World Cup

The Herald

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • The Herald

Final audit still not ready nearly two years after 2023 Netball World Cup

The biggest cost, R10.48m, was listed as depreciation of property, plant and equipment, up from R13,261 from the previous year. Next was R8.9m spent in an item described as World Netball surplus share. Then came: R7.3m on public relations and marketing campaign support; R4.17m on consulting fees, R4.13m on employee costs; and R2.4m on local travel costs. The only other cost to reach seven figures was branding at R1.16m. A commission of R604,000 was paid. An amount of R6,191 was listed for overseas travel. There were no details of salaries, other than fees of R122,500 paid to board member Blanche de la Guerra, the former CEO of Netball South Africa (NSA). None of the other NWC directors received fees. However, it emerged NSA board members are paid taxable stipends, with suspended president Cecilia Molokwane receiving R40,000 a month. The vice-president receives R35,000 and normal board members R25,000, said NSA CEO Modiegi Komane, adding they could also claim expenses incurred.

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