03 Aug, 2025

‘Lives controlled by crime’: Explosive allegations hit South Africa police

‘Lives controlled by crime’: Explosive allegations hit South Africa police

Government under pressure as a provincial police commissioner accuses the country’s police chief of colluding with criminal gangs.

Cape Town, South Africa – When Patricia Blows heard a senior police officer’s explosive allegations against South Africa’s political and law enforcement elite last week, her thoughts went straight to the stalled investigation into her son’s killing nine years ago.

Angelo, an apprentice boilermaker, was about to turn 28 when he was shot in an apparent robbery on a Sunday afternoon in March 2016 while walking home from work in Langlaagte, Johannesburg.

To this day, the investigation has gone nowhere despite Blows providing the police with evidence they said they lacked, including witness statements she collected herself.

The lack of progress in the case began to make sense last week when the police commissioner in coastal KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) province, Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, claimed he had uncovered a crime syndicate involving politicians, senior police officers, correctional services officials, prosecutors, the judiciary and businesspeople in his province.

According to Mkhwanazi, speaking at a news conference on July 6, the systemic corruption rises all the way to the country's police minister, Senzo Mchunu, whom he accused of disbanding a task force set up to investigate political killings in KZN to protect his shady associates.

Like millions of South Africans, Blows was outraged by Mkhwanazi's allegations – but not entirely surprised.

"I immediately thought of our battle for justice. I just couldn't find an open door. It still hurts like hell," said Blows, a community activist from Blackheath on the Cape Flats, a part of Cape Town plagued by violent drug-trafficking gangs.

"I had fresh hope in Mchunu. Now this? Then doubt drifted in, and I had an overwhelming fear for [Mkhwanazi's] safety," Blows said from his suburb on the outskirts of the Cape Flats, where a police station came under attack about a month ago, presumably in retaliation for the arrest of a local crime boss.