NPA retreats on admission of political interference in TRC cases

The National Prosecuting Authority has appeared to step back from its earlier admission of political interference in apartheid-era prosecutions. This shift emerged during cross-examination at the Khampepe inquiry on 25 May. Former president Thabo Mbeki is also challenging a summons to testify before the same panel.

During questioning of former acting National Director of Public Prosecutions Silas Ramaite, NPA advocate Yonela Ntloko stated that the authority does not know anything about interference. She added that the NPA cannot establish interference and instead pointed to a lack of resistance by officials and the complexities of a young democracy.

This marks a change from the NPA’s 2019 affidavit in the Ahmed Timol case, where Senior Deputy Director Torie Pretorius acknowledged political pressure on prosecutions. Former NPA head Vusi Pikoli has also testified to withering pressure from political figures including Bridget Mabandla.

Mbeki received a summons on 14 May to appear before the inquiry. He has asked the Gauteng High Court to suspend it while a Constitutional Court ruling on alleged bias by chair Sisi Khampepe remains pending. The court is scheduled to hear the matter on 29 June.

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KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi testifies against suspended deputy Sibiya at parliamentary ad hoc committee hearing.
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Mkhwanazi testifies against Sibiya as ad hoc committee wraps up

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KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi gave final testimony to Parliament's ad hoc committee on 18 March 2026, declaring no peace with suspended deputy Shadrack Sibiya and accusing him of ties to criminal elements. He also questioned the trustworthiness of Lieutenant General Hilda Senthumule over a docket transfer. The committee, probing national security concerns from Mkhwanazi's July 2025 claims, now drafts its report.

Former National Prosecuting Authority head Shaun Abrahams told the Khampepe Commission that TRC-related prosecutions started during his tenure and denied any political interference or personal failure in handling apartheid-era cases.

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Former South African presidents Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma have filed a court challenge to remove retired judge Sisi Khampepe from heading an inquiry into delays in Truth and Reconciliation Commission prosecutions. The move targets alleged political interference in apartheid-era cases and raises questions about judicial impartiality. President Cyril Ramaphosa has stated he will abide by the court's decision.

Imtiaz Cajee, nephew of murdered anti-apartheid activist Ahmed Timol, testified at the Khampepe Commission that officials deliberately sabotaged Truth and Reconciliation Commission prosecutions. He retracted earlier beliefs in political interference, instead pointing to individuals from the apartheid era. The testimony highlights ongoing struggles for accountability over apartheid-era deaths.

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The National Prosecuting Authority in Mpumalanga has filed an application for leave to appeal orders of contempt of court and a warrant of arrest against State Prosecutor Mkhuseli Ntaba.

Deputy National Police Commissioner Lt General Tebello Mosikili has detailed her involvement in the disbandment of the Political Killings Task Team before Parliament's Ad Hoc Committee.

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South Africa's National Police Commissioner Fannie Masemola made his first court appearance in Pretoria on April 21, 2026, facing four charges of contravening the Public Finance Management Act. The charges relate to a R360-million police tender allegedly irregularly awarded to Vusimuzi 'Cat' Matlala's company. The case was postponed to May 13.

 

 

 

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