A parliamentary ad hoc committee has concluded that witness testimony reveals a serious institutional crisis in South Africa’s law enforcement agencies. The findings follow months of hearings into allegations of drug cartel infiltration.
Advocate Norman Arendse SC, the evidence leader, told the committee on 28 May 2026 that the South African Police Service faces a multilayered crisis. Key issues include the politicisation of senior appointments, governance failures in the National Prosecuting Authority, inadequate vetting processes, and instability in Crime Intelligence.
The investigation stems from accusations made in July 2025 by KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi. He alleged that the Big Five drug cartel had infiltrated the criminal justice system and politics. The committee heard from 28 witnesses between October 2025 and earlier this year.
Arendse stated that Vusimuzi “Cat” Matlala was not credible and was a participant in a corrupt network rather than a victim. He also noted that former police minister Senzo Mchunu disbanded the Political Killings Task Team on 31 December 2024 without consulting President Cyril Ramaphosa or senior officials. An audit showed no progress on 121 removed case dockets.
The committee must conclude its work by 12 June 2026 before tabling its report in Parliament. A parallel Madlanga Commission of Inquiry is scheduled to resume hearings on 1 June.