South Africa's Parliament is demanding an urgent meeting with Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana to clarify the status of R3.8 billion in promised funding for the South African Post Office. The funding is crucial for infrastructure upgrades, digitisation and settling debts as part of a turnaround plan. Without it, the post office's business rescue could fail prematurely.
Parliament's Communications and Digital Technologies Portfolio Committee has called for immediate clarity on the outstanding R3.8 billion funding commitment to the South African Post Office (SAPO). This demand arose during a recent committee meeting, where members expressed concerns over the delay in funds intended to support infrastructure upgrades, a digitisation programme and the settlement of creditor obligations. These measures form the core of SAPO's business rescue plan aimed at reviving the struggling state-owned entity.
Advocate Aadielah Arnold, the committee's legal advisor, highlighted the risks, stating that SAPO's business rescue practitioners have warned the lack of funding could jeopardise the entire plan, potentially leading to an early exit from the process. The Communications Workers Union has echoed these worries, cautioning on 7 February 2025 of a 'huge possibility' that SAPO might cease operations by month's end without intervention.
Committee chairperson Khusela Diko emphasised the need for direct engagement with the Treasury. 'The sense that I have always had was that, in the event that SAPO is able to present a sustainability plan to the National Treasury – and I must commend them for the work they have started doing around seeking strategic partnerships – then the National Treasury would be on board,' she said. Diko proposed scheduling a meeting soon to assess progress on this front.
This push comes amid broader efforts to stabilise SAPO, which has faced ongoing financial woes. Earlier, in May 2025, a separate R381 million lifeline from the Unemployment Insurance Fund helped preserve around 6,000 jobs, but the larger R3.8 billion allocation remains unresolved.