Expand STATEMENT

The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) notes the arrest of 12 senior members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) in connection with the corrupt awarding of a R360 million Medicare 24 tender.

The officers, many of whom reportedly sat on the bid adjudication committee, stand accused of corruption, fraud, and violations of the Public Finance Management Act after facilitating an irregular contract intended to provide health services to over 180,000 police personnel. This contract has been tainted from its inception, with evidence of collusion, missing compliance requirements, and links to criminal kingpin Vusimuzi “Cat” Matlala, who has long been associated with tender manipulation and criminal infiltration of state institutions.

These arrests must be understood within the broader context of the unfolding investigations before the Madlanga Commission and the Ad Hoc Committee— processes which the EFF played a central role in initiating to expose corruption within the security cluster.

The developments emerging from this scandal affirm what the EFF has long maintained: that corruption within SAPS is not isolated, but part of an entrenched network of criminality embedded at the highest levels of law enforcement. The testimony and evidence presented before the Commission have already revealed a pattern of collusion, abuse of procurement systems, and the systematic looting of public resources by those entrusted with upholding the law. While the EFF welcomes these arrests as a necessary step towards accountability, we do so with caution. Our experience in South Africa has shown that high-profile arrests are often used to create the illusion of justice, only for cases to collapse due to weak prosecutions, political interference, or deliberate delays. We have seen time and again how individuals implicated in serious corruption evade meaningful consequences, returning to positions of influence while the public is left without justice.

We are, therefore, warning the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) that this must not be one of those cases.The arrest of these 12 officers should mark only the beginning of a far-reaching process to dismantle corruption within SAPS. There are numerous senior police officials, many of whom have appeared before the Commission and Ad Hoc Committee, whose testimony has raised serious questions about their conduct, relationships, and role in enabling corruption. These individuals occupy powerful positions within the police service and cannot be shielded from scrutiny.

The EFF reiterates that justice must not only be done, but must be seen to be done. These arrests must lead to successful prosecutions, asset recovery, and the permanent removal of corrupt elements from the state. Anything less will confirm that South Africa remains a playground for criminal syndicates operating under the protection of political and institutional power.

The EFF will continue to monitor these developments closely and will not hesitate to intensify political and parliamentary action should this matter be allowed to collapse like many before it.

“The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) notes the arrest of 12 senior members of the South African Police Service (SAPS) in connection with the corrupt awarding of a R360 million Medicare 24 tender.” The officers “stand accused of corruption, fraud, and violations of the Public Finance Management Act after facilitating an irregular contract.” The EFF warns the NPA that “this must not be one of those cases” where arrests “are often used to create the illusion of justice, only for cases to collapse due to weak prosecutions, political interference, or deliberate delays.”