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TimeSpace illusion
@TimeSpaceillus1
I Block anyone who doesn't allow me to comment on his/her Time-line....
Katılım Temmuz 2022
344 Takip Edilen534 Takipçiler

@DudulaWMCproxie @errolbsk yip yours and the EFF can't be Dudula you stupid idiot they just love kwerekweres too much ...stop embarrassing yourself idiot
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@DudulaWMCproxie @errolbsk Nkosi who implicated Malema is in jail as we speak dumb dumb
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@Nisto47795249 @errolbsk Malema is one of the people that made you think that the ANC is corrupt today the truth is coming out ...he dance with the big 5
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@MoyaboMasipa @errolbsk he's captured by white crooks and hides behind Phala Phala ...the Madlanga Commission is exposing them one by one ....
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@errolbsk He understands the game more than anyone else in this country and those who can bring him down are just as corrupt and they know that he knows that they are also corrupt. That is the problem.
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@DudulaWMCproxie @errolbsk he is exposed boy boy we all heard what a skelm he is
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@errolbsk he played a big part in the zupta state capture that one this time around, CIC juju with 7 tender seeking companies is being exposed on national TV 😏
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@IanCameron23 stuff your legal nonsense people are dying and don't have time for political grand standing...we needed this action 10 years ago
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Footage and reports emerging today from Eldorado Park and Riverlea raise serious questions about the current SANDF deployment in parts of Gauteng.
Let me be clear at the outset. This is not criticism of the SANDF assisting with stabilisation on the ground in support of the South African Police Service. The concern is whether the correct legal authority, planning and command structures are in place for what we are now seeing.
Parliament has not approved any new SANDF deployment specifically aimed at combating gang related crime following the State of the Nation Address. If such a deployment has now taken place, it must be properly explained.
Up until last week there was still no clarity about whether SAPS and SANDF had conducted joint operational training in the provinces where deployments would occur. As recently as Friday, there was also no clear indication of what the command and control structure between SAPS and the SANDF would look like.
It is also very concerning to see the apparent absence of South African Police Service members on the ground, particularly the lack of visible senior SAPS members who should ordinarily be responsible for operational command and coordination during such deployments.
In South Africa the military does not replace the police. When the SANDF is deployed internally, it supports SAPS in terms of section 201(2)(a) of the Constitution and the Defence Act. SAPS remains the lead law enforcement authority.
That is why something feels wrong when one sees a teenage boy being arrested by soldiers in a residential street.
This afternoon I wrote urgently to the National Commissioner requesting immediate clarity on the deployment and the operational framework under which it is taking place.
Among the questions I have asked are:
• What is the legal basis for the current SANDF deployment in these areas?
• Was the deployment formally authorised and reported to Parliament, as required when the SANDF is employed internally?
• Is this deployment part of the security interventions mentioned during the State of the Nation Address, or is it linked to an extension of the existing SANDF deployment originally authorised for illegal mining operations?
• Under whose operational command are SANDF members functioning and how does that command structure relate to SAPS?
• What rules of engagement have been issued to SANDF members operating in civilian environments?
• What joint operational planning and coordination took place between SAPS and SANDF before the deployment?
I also raised concerns about the criminal justice system side of these operations, because arrests without proper follow through often collapse in court:
• Have the courts been briefed regarding the operational framework under which arrests may occur?
• Is SAPS forensic capacity prepared to process evidence arising from these operations?
• Have dedicated detectives been assigned to ensure arrests translate into proper investigations and prosecutions?
These questions matter.
Without clear command structures, proper joint training and integration with the criminal justice system, deployments like this risk creating confusion rather than delivering meaningful results in the fight against organised crime and gang violence.
I have requested clarity from the National Commissioner within 24 hours and will update the public once answers are received.
South Africans deserve transparency and accountability when military resources are deployed in civilian communities.
IC
(Picture: Mongezi Koko/EWN)

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@errolbsk no wonder our country is so foked up we've been led by idiots for years
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@Lesufi Black South Africans have never experienced freedom, just immediately after apartheid has fallen, you opened up our borders to millions of poor immigrants from failed states in Africa and Asia, who brought no value but crime and poverty.
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