SAPS in Northern Cape in need of dogs


By REGINALD KANYANE

2 September 2025- The South African Police Service (SAPS) in the Northern Cape is requesting the public to donate dogs to the K9 unit to boost the capacity and enhance service delivery. The police said dogs such as border collies, German shepherds, dutch shepherds, Labradors, bloodhounds, rottweilers and malinois(Belgian Shepherds) can be donated.

 The Northern Cape police spokesperson, Lieutenant Colonel Sergio Kock said they are looking for dogs that are between 18 months to 5 years old. Kock said the dog must be healthy and suitable to be trained in any of the eight disciplines in the SAPS K9 environment.

“Dog must be confident, energetic and not scared of people or loud voices. Members of the public can contact the SAPS Provincial K9 unit for evaluation of the dog prior to the donation.

“For more information please contact Lieutenant Colonel Nehemiah Malete on 082 776 9061 or Warrant Officer Brakkies Breedt on 082 554 5597 or email BreedtG@saps.gov.za,” he said.

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A call for urgent action to address dysfunction at Ramotshere-Moiloa Local Municipality


By AGISANANG SCUFF

2 September 2025 – The joint parliamentary oversight delegation expressed concern and shock on Monday at the levels of dysfunction in the Ramotshere Moiloa Local Municipality in Zeerust, describing the state of affairs as deeply troubling.

The delegation comprises the Portfolio Committee on Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, and the Standing Committee on the Auditor-General. The committee is conducting the oversight together with the North West Provincial Legislature (NWPL).

The Chairperson of the Committee on Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA), Dr Zweli Mkhize said the oversight visit is part of a broader engagement with underperforming municipalities across provinces. Mkhize said during the engagement on Ramotshere Moiloa Local Municipality, the delegation heard from the mayor, speaker, municipal manager, and Chief Financial Officer on the challenges facing the municipality.

“The leadership acknowledged longstanding issues with governance and administrative instability, as well as challenges in financial management and service delivery.

“Ramotshere Moiloa Municipality has operated with successive unfunded budgets and struggles with significant debt, including more than R94 million owed to Eskom,” he said.

Mkhize further said the municipality has also been experiencing service delivery protests over water shortages. He added that the delegation was further informed about the current impasse in municipal operations, caused by political infighting, reports of alleged unlawful council processes, intimidation by outsiders, and a shooting incident at the municipal offices.

“We describe the state of affairs as unacceptable. The people of the North West are being denied basic services because of criminality and political dysfunction.

“We cannot accept a situation where a municipal manager is unable to access his office while outsiders occupy municipal property,” said Mkhize.

He said members noted allegations that criminal elements have compromised the municipality. Mkhize said they also highlighted the gravity of allegations relating to illegal appointments, financial mismanagement and reports of unauthorised meetings presided over by the Speaker of the municipality.

“MPs and Members of the Provincial Legislature (MPLs) also called for clarity on who authorised these actions and demanded consequences for those involved.

“The delegation noted that there are individuals in leadership positions within the municipality who should be held accountable for the failures observed. The paralysis cannot be tolerated any longer,” he said.

Mkhize said members also noted the municipality’s progress in stabilising its finances, but said the collapse of governance and political interference is undermining this. He said they criticised the North West Premier, Lazarus Mokgosi, for failing to act timeously and said his office should have taken more decisive action, as the continued delay has compounded the crisis and left residents without water, electricity and other essential services.

“This was not the first time during the engagement that the provincial government was reminded of its constitutional responsibilities.

“Members reiterated that the provincial executive has a constitutional responsibility to act decisively in addressing transgressions and governance failures that continue to undermine service delivery,” said Mkhize.

He said they emphasised that interventions in municipalities must not be limited to general commitments, but must focus on measurable targets, concrete actions and clear timelines.

Mkhize said the delegation called on the Mokgosi and his provincial cabinet to return today (Tuesday) with a comprehensive plan of action to restore governance and service delivery in Ramotshere Moiloa Local Municipality.

“The joint delegation cannot return to Parliament without a proper report that provides an undertaking that the crisis will be addressed with the necessary urgency.

“We owe it to the people of Ramotshere, to the people of the North West and to South Africa as a whole,” he said.

Mkhize said they cannot condone this paralysis and those responsible must be held accountable. He said the joint delegation will continue its engagement with North West municipalities today.

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Kubayi to deliver a keynote address at 2025 Book Roundtable Conversation


By BAKANG MOKOTO

2 September 2025- The Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Mmamoloko Kubayi will deliver the keynote address at the 2025 Book Roundtable Conversation under the theme: “Justice, Gender and the Unfinished Work of Freedom.” The round table will be hosted by Prof Mandla Radebe, author of the Book “Apartheid Didn’t Die”.

Kubayi spokesperson, Terrence Manase said this roundtable brings together thought leaders, authors, and stakeholders to engage on critical issues at the intersection of justice, gender, and freedom. Manase said the event will take place at EmpowaWorx House, 364 Pine Avenue, Ferndale, Randburg on Wednesday at 3pm.

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Two learners accused of murder granted bail


By KEDIBONE MOLAETSI

2 September 2025- Two learners from Lesedi Secondary School who are facing a charge of premeditated murder, were granted bail by the Bronkhorstspruit Magistrate’s Court. The accused, Mlehalinye Montasi (20), a Grade 12 learner, was granted bail of R6 000, while Kgotlhello Mathabathe (19), a Grade 10 learner, was granted bail of R3 000.

The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) regional spokesperson in Gauteng, Lumka Mahanjana said the duo is accused of stabbing and killing fellow learner, Grade 10 pupil Lethabo Mokonyane on 17 June 2025.

Mahanjana said it is alleged that after writing exams, Mokonyane was on his way to the school gate when the accused confronted him. She further said a fight allegedly ensued, during which one of the accused restrained him while the other stabbed him multiple times with a sharp object.

“Mokonyane was rushed to the hospital, where he died a few hours later. In court, the accused applied for bail, citing the need to continue with their schooling. The state prosecutor, Karabo Sebela opposed bail, arguing that Montasi is in the country illegally and therefore poses a flight risk.

“She further submitted that both accused are known to the witnesses and may interfere with them,” said Mahanjana.

She added that the magistrate nevertheless granted bail, with strict conditions that the accused must attend court proceedings until the finalisation of the trial, may not interfere, directly or indirectly, with witnesses and must subject themselves to correctional supervision and comply with all imposed rules.

“The matter was postponed to 10 October 2025 for Regional Court,” said Mahanjana.

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South Africa’s great municipal experiment


By REGINALD KANYANE

2 September 2025- The Director of the School of Government Studies at North West University (NWU), Professor Kedibone Phago said South Africa is preparing the most sweeping reconfiguration of local government since 1996. Phago said the Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA), Velenkosini Hlabisa, has unveiled a plan to reduce dysfunction, shore up finances and restore public trust in the country’s 257 municipalities.

“At least 35 of these are now deemed dysfunctional, crippled by empty coffers and chronic failures in basic service delivery. The reform is bold in scope.

“Dysfunctional municipalities may be disbanded. Leadership requirements will be professionalised, ending politically motivated appointments that have hollowed out administrative competence,” he said.

Phago further said a new framework of minimum skills for senior managers is being developed. He added that a comprehensive review of the 1998 White Paper on Local Government, launched in May, will underpin both legislative reforms and the drafting of a new funding model.

“Several bills are in the pipeline. Amendments to general local-government law, stricter rules for unstable coalitions, and a legal framework for interventions in failing municipalities.

“I believe the scale of the intervention is overdue but warns against cosmetic fixes. We need to ask ourselves how the local government can respond more effectively to residents’ needs,” said Phago.

He said the main problem is that this process focuses on the political process as a means to fix systemic rot. Phago said yet it is the political process that has brought the country to a point where most municipalities are not only dysfunctional, but have become highly toxic places to work and do business.

“This points to the chilling climate professionals face. Most would rather seek employment elsewhere than work in local government.

“Sadly, it is not only municipalities in rural areas that are marred by grand corruption. Even in metropolitan areas we have witnessed killings of professionals investigating corruption,” he said.

Phago said cases in Ekurhuleni and Johannesburg abound, with no end in sight. He said unless individuals with “material interests” are removed, reform will merely resurface old problems under new laws.

“The dysfunction is not monolithic, but bifurcated. Rural municipalities often lack economic activity, making them entirely dependent on transfers from the national fiscus.

“Places lacking basic municipal services can neither create nor attract middle-class families who would pay for services,” said Phago.

He said urban and metropolitan areas, by contrast, have stronger revenue bases but are plagued by procurement capture. Phago said the political elite and their cronies have hijacked Supply Chain Management (SCM) processes.

“Resources are diverted from serving residents to serving providers. This has become chronic and requires institutional capacity and leadership to fix.

“Most striking is a call for technocratic rigour. Why don’t we use a scientific process to inform the shake-up, Minister?” he asked.

Phago proposes that no municipality should exist without substantial economic activity proportional to its population. He said moreover, councils that consistently underperform – as flagged by the Auditor-General or forensic investigations – should be stripped of their financial powers and placed under a centralised CoGTA agency until the end of their term.

“It is such drastic reconfiguration steps,” he argues, “that would help reduce dysfunctionality within the local-government system and restore public trust.

“For now, CoGTA has named a handful of municipalities for immediate intervention: Ditsobotla in the North West, Kopanong and Mafube in the Free State, Emfuleni in Gauteng, Thabazimbi in Limpopo, and even the eThekwini metro,” said Phago.

He said the ambition is commendable. But as Phago cautions, only reforms anchored in professional standards, enforceable oversight and economic viability will succeed.

“Anything less risks replicating the hollow politics of the past three decades. South Africa’s great municipal experiment may finally be under way.

“Its success will depend not on the fanfare of announcements, but on whether the government dares to enforce the very discipline it preaches,” he said.

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Kgetsi ya go tshola dipudi tse go belaelwang fa di utswitswe e buseditswe morago


Ka OBAKENG MAJE

2 Lwetse 2025- Kgetsi ya go tshola leruo le go belaelwang fa le utswitswe kgatlhanong le banna ba le bararo, Tshepo Molefe (37), Rebaone Matlhoahela (33) le Boikanyo Seetelo (35), e buseditswe morago ke kgotlhatshekelo ya Klerksdorp mo letsatsing la maabane.

Kgetsi kgatlhanong le Molefe, Matlhoahela ga mmogo le Seetelo, e buseditswe morago go fitlha di 8 Lwetse 2025, fa dipatlisiso di tsweletse. Banna ba, bat la nama ba letile kwa ntlolefitshwana.

Molefe, Matlhoahela le Seetelo, ba tshwerwe mabapi le go tshola (possession) dipudi tse go belaelwang fa di utswitswe. Go begwa fa banna ba, ba tshwerwe kwa tselakgolo ya N12 kwa Klerksdorp mo bekeng e e fetileng.

Se bueledi sa sepodisi mono Bokone Bophirima, Brigadier Sabata Mokgwabone are sepodisi se ile sa longwa tsebe mabapi le go tsamaisiwa ga dipudi tse 26 tse di neng di le mo sejanageng. Mokgwabone are sepodisi se ile sa lalela banna ba, mme ba emisa sejanaga sa bone.

“Sepodisi se ile sa puruputsha sejanaga seo, mme ba fitlhela dipudi di le 26 tsa boleng jwa R50 000 mo sejanageng seo. Banna ba, ba ile ba tshwarwa morago ga go tlholega go neelana ka bopaki jwa gore dipudi ke tsa bone.

“Ba tlile go tlhagelela kwa kgotlhatshekelo ya Klerksdorp ka Mosupulogo mabapi le ditatofatso tsa go tshola dipudi tse go belaelwang di utswitswe mo go bone,” Mokgwabone wa tlhalosa.

Mokgwabone are go bonala fa dipudi tseo, di ne di isiwa kwa porofenseng ya Gauteng. Mokgwabone are sepodisi se tla sala kgetsi e morago le go upulola gore dipudi tseo ke tsa ga mang.

Kgabagare, go begwa fa dingwe tsa dipudi tseo, ele tsa kwa motseng wa Manthe, gaufi le Taung.

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Broos issued a rallying call ahead of 2026 Fifa World Cup qualifiers


Picture: Bafana Bafana caoch, Hugo Broos/Supplied

By REGINALD KANYANE

2 September 2025- Bafana Bafana coach Hugo Broos has issued a rallying call to his players ahead of the crunch 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifiers against Lesotho and Nigeria in the coming days. The South African senior men’s national team will face Lesotho away from home on 5 September 2025, and then host Nigeria on 9 September 2025.

Broos said his charges have to fight with everything they have got in the two crucial matches.

“We are still strong enough to beat Lesotho, but again, we have to focus and we have to concentrate. We have to reach our level best, and we have to fight.

“Playing a good game of football is okay when we can do it, why shouldn’t we do it, but let’s start from the first game, from the first minute and fight for every second, for every square metre on the pitch and try to win that game,” he said.

Broos further said it would be a very good situation for them, if they could win the game on Friday. He added that this has been one of the most difficult camps he has ever overseen as the team has been plagued by a lot of injuries to key players.

“With the team already missing a host of regulars due to injuries and other off-field problems, our charges suffered another blow following the injuries to Ime Okon and Patrick Maswanganyi.

“I have called up midfielder Sipho Mbule and defender Thabo Moloisane as late replacements,” said Broos.

He said Kamogelo Sebelele and Mduduzi Shabalala accompanied him to the arrival press conference on Monday and they expressed excitement following Bafana Bafana’s recognition of the hard work they have delivered for their respective clubs.

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Three stock-theft accused granted bail


By OBAKENG MAJE

2 September 2025- The stock theft case against the accused, Naledi Motheo (35), Goitseone Gwai (42) and Monnapula Lephoi (61), was postponed by the Atamelang Magistrate’s Court to 29 September 2025. Motheo, Gwai and Lephoi were granted R2000 bail each.

The North West police spokesperson, Brigadier Sabata Mokgwabone said the accused initially appeared in court on 29 August 2025, following their arrests in Madibogopan village on 28 August 2025, for stock theft. Mokgwabone said according to information, the livestock owner realised in the early hours of Thursday morning, 28 August 2025, that his livestock was not in the kraal. 

“With the assistance of his brother and a neighbour, they drove around and searched until they spotted two vehicles, a Toyota Avanza and a Toyota Hilux. The said cars were later found along the road at Dithwaneng Section.

“The police were called and on arrival, they found people loading goats in the bakkie. The individuals, with the exception of the driver, ran into the bushes while the female driver of the Avanza drove off from the scene,” he said.


Mokgwabone further said the livestock owner later identified 14 goats and four sheep as his and the driver was then placed under arrest. He added that the vehicle was confiscated.

“At around 6am, the driver of the Avanza arrived at the police station accompanied by a man and she enquired about the arrest of the Toyota Hilux driver.

“They were both arrested in connection with the crime,” said Mokgwabone. 

Meanwhile, the acting North West Police Commissioner, Major General Patrick Asaneng, indicated that this is excellent work aided by an alert owner and the quick response of the police to the complaint. Asaneng instructed that both the bakkie and the Avanza must be seized and subjected to the instrumentality procedure.

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Water leaks ignored while residents go without


By AGISANANG SCUFF

1 September 2025- The DA calls for immediate repair of major water leaks and urgent implementation of monitoring systems to address the crisis facing Matjhabeng residents. The DA said a recent oversight revealed shocking levels of water wastage, while residents suffer from water shedding and prolonged periods without supply.

DA councillor in Matjhabeng Local Municipality, Jessica Nel said the municipality’s failure to respond to massive water leakages is entirely unacceptable. Nel said in Ward 36, she identified several critical sites, where clean water is being wasted daily.

“At the Thusanong District Hospital reservoir, thousands of litres of water have been running to waste for months. Although two expensive quotations were submitted to the provincial government, a simple, cost-effective solution involving JoJo tanks could have been implemented at a fraction of the price.

“In 7de Laan, a municipal non-funded housing project, a leaking connection point continuously spills water. A basic tap installation would resolve the problem, yet nothing has been done,” she said.

Nel further said in Hospital Park (Baron and Antimoon Streets), a massive veld leakage has poured clean water into gutters and storm drains for weeks without repair. She added that these examples reflect a wider pattern across Matjhabeng.

“Leaks are ignored when no immediate solution is found, or responsibility is shifted between municipal, district, and provincial authorities.

“The result is enormous wastage of safe, costly drinking water, literally money down the drain,” said Nel.

She said although a WhatsApp reporting group exists for councillors, officials and Vaal Central Water, it is largely ineffective. Nel said that reports are ignored, accountability is lacking and residents continue to be without water.

“This neglect directly undermines the formal motion tabled by DA Cllr René Steyn earlier this year, which Council adopted. That motion called for rapid response to water leaks and burst pipes.

“He also called for proper road restoration after pipe repairs, capacity building in the Infrastructure Department. This includes regular reporting and accountability on water issues,” she said.

Nel said there is a need for oversight by the Water Crisis Ad Hoc Committee. She said despite the council’s adoption, the necessary measures have not been implemented, demonstrating the municipality’s disregard for its own commitments and duty to residents.

“The DA therefore demands immediate deployment of emergency teams to address major leaks, a dedicated WhatsApp group focused solely on emergency leaks and bursts.

This includes transparent monitoring of response times and repair progress.

“We demand escalation to provincial authorities, where officials fail to act. Accountability enforcement for officials who neglect their duties and it is unacceptable that preventable municipal mismanagement, not drought, causes water shortages,” said Nel.

She said they will persist until Matjhabeng addresses the leaks and restores reliable water service to all residents.

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DA welcomes progress on Foot and Mouth Disease prevention


By BAKANG MOKOTO

1 September 2025- The Democratic Alliance (DA) said it welcomed the update by Minister of Agriculture, John Steenhuisen, on the measures being implemented to combat Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD). The DA said they note with particular importance that no new outbreaks have been recorded in the Eastern Cape since September 2024.

The DA spokesperson on Agriculture and Member of Parliament (MP), Willie Aucamp said Northern Cape and Western Cape remain FMD-free. Aucamp said there are currently 274 unresolved outbreaks in five provinces, of which 180 are in KwaZulu-Natal.

“KZN remains the epicentre of infection, and was the source of the Mpumalanga outbreak following the sale of infected cattle at auction.

“The announcement of a mid-scale vaccine production facility, due to be operational by March 2026, to strengthen South Africa’s self-reliance and reduce dependence on imports. Key steps to accelerate animal identification, expand diagnostic capacity, and intensify awareness campaigns,” he said.

Aucamp further said the establishment of an Industry–Government Task Team on animal disease prevention, management and control — a vital structure to ensure better coordination, enforcement, and accountability. He added that FMD has severe consequences for South Africa’s agricultural industry.

“It blocks export opportunities, increases costs for both producers and consumers and threatens jobs across the value chain. We are encouraged by the Minister’s commitments, but stresses that success will depend on an all-of-society approach.

“Farmers, industry, government, and civil society must all act responsibly and in the best interests of the agricultural sector and the broader economy,” said Aucamp.

He said the DA will continue to monitor the implementation of these measures, and hold the government accountable to ensure that FMD is brought under control and that South Africa’s agricultural industry is protected.

Meanwhile, Steenhuisen indicated that the Ministry of Agriculture has been flooded with media queries about the occurrence of foot-and-mouth disease in especially two provinces, KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng.

He said concerns were raised about meat safety and interventions from the Department of Agriculture to contain existing outbreaks and prevent future outbreaks.

“We would like to put the facts on the table and ask all citizens to make it their business to obtain knowledge about how to mitigate the spread of this disease.

“After all, biosecurity is everyone’s responsibility. The department has ordered 901 200 doses of vaccines to the value of over R70 million,” he said.

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