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SAMMY
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Lets help police locate this criminal like or retweet for great awareness @SAPoliceService @Abramjee

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Last week, the Madlanga Commission asked for records relating to Johannesburg Metro Police Department and broader city security contracts as part of its probe into alleged tender irregularities.
This week, the Justice Department says it lacks funds to cover the Madlanga Commission of Inquiry’s six-month extension into police corruption.
What a coincidence. 🤔🤔🤔
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@ewnupdates @NatashaMarrian This is an effort by the ANC to snub the Madlanga commission.
Too many cadres are exposed for corruption now. Also the president is protecting himself again 😡😡😡
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[COMMENT]
The testimony of Gareth Mnisi, Umashi Dhlamini and Lebogang Phiri before the Madlanga Commission should alarm every ratepayer.
The central question is simple: How were these TMPD officials allowed to continue operating amid serious allegations, questionable conduct and mounting concerns?
Misconduct does not survive in a vacuum. It survives when systems fail, when leaders look away, when complaints are buried, and when accountability is delayed until public outrage forces action.
Where was oversight inside the Tshwane Municipality?
Where were the internal investigators, disciplinary structures, ethics mechanisms and command leadership?
If patterns of misconduct were visible now through testimony, why were they not confronted earlier through proper internal processes?
Who approved promotions, transfers or continued appointments?
Who signed performance reviews?
Who ignored red flags?
Which managers received complaints and did nothing?
Which political office-bearers or municipal executives were briefed, and what action did they take?
This cannot be reduced to a few names at a commission. If wrongdoing continued over time, then there may have been a culture of protection, fear, favouritism or institutional paralysis.
Honest officials would have seen it. Staff members would have known.
Oversight is not a ceremonial word. It means active supervision, consequence management, auditing risk, protecting whistleblowers and removing compromised officials quickly.
If those safeguards failed, then the failure sits not only with the officers implicated, but with every layer above them that neglected its duty.
The public deserves clear answers:
When were the first complaints made?
Who received them?
What investigations were launched?
Why were decisive steps delayed?
Were whistleblowers victimised?
Were records altered, ignored or suppressed?
Did city leadership intervene or stay silent?
Who benefits when accountability stalls?
The Madlanga Commission must not become another exercise where shocking testimony is heard and then forgotten.
Findings must lead to suspensions where justified, disciplinary action, criminal referrals where warranted, and reform of the systems that enabled the misconduct.
Citizens cannot be asked to trust law enforcement while oversight collapses behind closed doors.
If the guardians of the law were protected instead of policed, then the entire chain of command must answer for it.
@pule_jones



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🇮🇳 A man in India dug up his deceased sister's skeleton and brought it to the bank just to prove she had died.
He'd been trying to withdraw money from her account for months.
Staff kept telling him the account holder needed to appear in person.
He's illiterate and had no idea a death certificate existed.
The bank got what it asked for.
Source: Times of India
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