Process to appoint 50 additional judges to get underway

Source: Government of South Africa

Process to appoint 50 additional judges to get underway

In a major bid to tackle mounting court backlogs, the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development has reached an agreement with National Treasury to begin the process of appointing an additional 50 new judges to increase judicial capacity.

This according to Justice Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi who answered questions in the National Assembly on Wednesday.

In the State of the Nation Address (SONA) last month, President Cyril Ramaphosa pronounced steps to be taken to speed up the wheels of justice.

Two weeks after SONA, Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana announced an additional R687 million allocation to increase capacity in the judiciary.

“Following the pronouncement by the President…myself and Minister of Finance met together with the judiciary, not only to look at the matters that relate to the specialised courts, but funding completely for the judiciary.

“We have, however, agreed that we will look in terms of administration of justice in line with the Constitution, in terms of working together with the judiciary to ensure that we build capacity.

“We have started this work to look at all of them. We have agreed with the Minister of Finance that we start with 50 judges additional to the establishment that is currently there so that we can build capacity,” Kubayi told the National Assembly.

In addition to bolstering the courts’ capacity, Kubayi also provided an update on government’s anti-corruption agenda.

She told the house that the final report of the National Anti-Corruption Advisory Council (NACAC) is now being processed.

In its report, the council called for, amongst others:

  • The establishment of a permanent, independent, and constitutionally entrenched anti-corruption body. 
  • The strengthening and coordination of law enforcement agencies, with enhanced coordination mechanisms.
  • Mechanisms to prevent corruption.
  • The establishment of an anti-corruption data sharing framework and strengthened whistle-blower protection measures.

“The President has directed the Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development to process the recommendations of NACAC for tabling and deliberation in Cabinet. The processing of the report is underway.

“The legislation for whistleblower protection has been completed and will be released into the public domain shortly,” the Minister concluded. – SAnews.gov.za

NeoB

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Treasury DDG: Budget Office to take up position at IMF

Source: Government of South Africa

Treasury DDG: Budget Office to take up position at IMF

National Treasury Deputy Director General (DDG) of the Budget Office, Edgar Sishi, will leave the department to take up a position at the International Monetary Fund.

This according to a statement by the department confirming Sishi’s resignation.

“The National Treasury thanks Edgar for his dedicated service to the department and to South Africa and congratulates him on his new post.

“The departure of a senior official is always challenging for the institution, but Edgar has built a strong team at the Budget Office, and I have full confidence in their ability to maintain the very high standards set under his stewardship,” Treasury Director General, Dr Duncan Pieterse, said.

The department said Sishi’s last day in office will be at the end of this month.

“Mr. Sishi joined the National Treasury in 2007 and has been an integral part of the senior leadership of the department for several years. He took over the Budget Office during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and has played a crucial role in navigating the public finances through unprecedented challenges.

“His leadership has helped to achieve the turning point in South Africa’s public finances that was evident in the 2026 Budget, with debt stabilising for the first time since before the 2008 global financial crisis.

“The improvement in public finances will support faster growth and lower borrowing costs, while protecting the future sustainability of social spending,” the department said.

The recruitment for a new, permanent DDG in the Budget Office will begin as soon as possible.

“From 1 April 2026, three Chief Directors with direct exposure to the budget process will act on a rotation basis, beginning with Mr. Marumo Maake, who was previously acting Head of the Budget Office from April to October 2025,” National Treasury said. – SAnews.gov.za

NeoB

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Deputy President Mashatile to attend SA Rugby annual awards

Source: Government of South Africa

Deputy President Mashatile to attend SA Rugby annual awards

Deputy President Paul Mashatile is expected to attend and hand over awards at the South African Rugby Player of the Year Awards ceremony at the Cape Town International Convention Centre on Thursday evening. 

The annual awards recognise and honour players, coaches and clubs who demonstrated high performance during the 2025 rugby season, celebrating excellence both on and off the field.

As a champion of social cohesion and nation building initiatives across the country, Mashatile is expected to highlight the role of sport particularly rugby in promoting social cohesion and nation-building in South Africa.

The Deputy President is also expected to emphasise rugby’s contribution to uniting South Africans behind the national team over the years, as well as the country’s success on the global stage as multiple Rugby World Cup champions.

The awards ceremony will begin at 7:30pm. – SAnews.gov.za

 

DikelediM

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Construction council calls for mandatory use of registered building inspectors

Source: Government of South Africa

Construction council calls for mandatory use of registered building inspectors

The South African Council for the Project and Construction Management Professions (SACPCMP) has issued an urgent call for the mandatory use of registered building inspectors on all construction and infrastructure projects.

The call follows the collapse of a building in Ormonde, south of Johannesburg, on Monday, which left nine construction workers dead, with others sustaining injuries.

READ | Deadly Ormonde building collapse: ‘Structure was not sound’

In a statement on Wednesday, the council said the incident underscores the importance of appointing properly registered professionals to safeguard public safety and ensure compliance with national building standards.

SACPCMP President Sharon Shunmugam said registered professionals provide the necessary experience and skills required to ensure that projects are executed to standards that guarantee sustainability and the safety of structures.

“The only lawful way to assure that structures are erected in alignment with the correct and procedural building practices is to appoint registered building inspectors on projects to monitor progress and highlight risk or misalignment in building standards,” Shunmugam said.

Preliminary reports from investigators revealed multiple contraventions of building regulations and procedures. It has also been reported that building plans for the structure were absent, as reported in media briefings this week by the Mayor of Johannesburg, Dada Morero.

Shunmugam said the council has consistently warned both industry stakeholders and the public about the risks associated with non-compliance.

“The safety of the public is a priority. Where construction and related processes fail to adhere to the regulated standards of safety and construction management, the breakdown or collapse of structures is a likely eventuality,” Shunmugam said.

She emphasised that the utilisation of qualified professionals within the construction environment is essential to ensure that standards are adhered to, and the highest quality of outputs within the built environment comes to the fore.

She said the council is deeply saddened and immensely concerned that to date, the construction sector is still facing incidents where the most basic lawful construction requirements are flouted, and lives are lost.

According to the SACPCMP, the appointment of a professional, registered building inspector in such instances would have brought irregularities to the fore and highlighted risks that would result in safeguarding both infrastructure and those working on site.

“It is a travesty that once again, we see lives lost in an event where this could have been fully prevented if regulations were properly followed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to those who have lost loved ones due to this tragedy and we are, as a council, ready to assist the relevant authorities in their investigation of this incident,” Shunmugam said. – SAnews.gov.za

GabiK

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Over 6 400 South Africans in the Middle East register on Travel Smart

Source: Government of South Africa

Over 6 400 South Africans in the Middle East register on Travel Smart

The Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) has noted a significant increase in registrations by South African citizens on its Travel Smart System, with more than 6 400 citizens in the Middle East having registered their presence as of 04 March 2026.

In a statement on Wednesday, DIRCO said South African citizens currently in the region for non-essential travel and who wish to evacuate cities and countries affected by the ongoing interstate conflict in the Middle East are strongly advised to use official channels to facilitate their departure.

“This proactive measure is essential to prepare for an exit from the danger zone as soon as it is safe to secure passage,” the department said. 

Citizens have also been urged to note that several airlines have resumed limited commercial flights out of the region.

“Citizens are strongly encouraged to take immediate advantage of this opportunity to leave, as heavy attacks are regrettably expected to continue in the coming days. Your safety is our paramount concern,” DIRCO said.

The department further discouraged South Africans from undertaking all non-essential travel to the region at this time.

South Africans experiencing difficulties with the evacuation process or those requiring urgent consular support have been urged to contact the department through its official channels.

For assistance, citizens may contact the South African Emergency Line at +27 12 351 1000 and request consular services. 

They can also reach the South African Embassy in Amman, Jordan on +962 6-461-5167, or make inquiries regarding the Jordan border on +962 5 393 3031.

Email coordination is available through ngwanyaa@dirco.gov.za or segevl@dirco.gov.za.
Emergency consular support can also be accessed through Mr Litha Ngwanya on +972 50-520-8100 or Ms Lizelle Segev on +972 54-588-0698.

Meanwhile, South Africa reiterated its call on all parties involved in the conflict to exercise maximum restraint and to act in a manner consistent with international law, international humanitarian law, and the principles of the United Nations Charter. 

In an advisory on Monday, South Africa has called on all its citizens currently in the Middle East to urgently contact the relevant South African embassies accredited to their countries of residence to ensure that they are registered, and that their whereabouts are known to officials amid heightened regional tensions.

In the advisory by DIRCO, government warned that consular support in parts of the region may be limited, particularly in the event of an emergency. 

The Travel Smart System can be accessed on: https://travelsmart.dirco.gov.za/welcome and also from the Apple App Store on https://apps.apple.com/za/app/travel-smart/id6446180597 and on Android on https://play.google.com/store/apps/details.  – SAnews.gov.za

 

DikelediM

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Free State police bolster border security in massive interprovincial operation

Source: Government of South Africa

Free State police bolster border security in massive interprovincial operation

In a decisive move to dismantle cross-border criminal networks, police in the Free State province recently spearheaded a high-density, interprovincial cross-border operation for the 4th Quarter of the 2025/26 financial year.

This strategic initiative, centered in the bordering town of Clarens, ran simultaneously across various provinces to create a unified front against the illegal movement of goods and persons.

The success of the operation was fuelled by an extensive collaboration of specialised South African Police Service (SAPS) units and external departments. The Free State contingent deployed a team of SAPS Specialised Units including Airwing, Crime Intelligence, FLASH, Flying Squad, Highway Patrol, Mounted Unit, K9, Public Order Police, Rapid Rail Police, the Tactical Response Team, Protection and Security Services, District Operational Command Centre, Reservists, the Anti-Gang Unit and Visible Policing.

Also included in the operation were external partners such as Immigration (Home Affairs), the Department of Economic, Small Business Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs, the Department of Health, Traffic, South African Revenue Service, Border Management Authority and the Gambling Board.

​“The operation focused heavily on the Thabo Mofutsanyana District, yielding 28 arrests for crimes that directly impact the local economy and community safety. Seven were arrested for stock theft, with stock recovered, and 14 undocumented persons were arrested,” the police said in a statement on Wednesday. 

Three drug-related crime arrests were effected. Two males were found in possession of stolen goods, while two traffic fines were issued to non-complying motorists.

“Beyond the arrests, the multi-disciplinary teams focused on tightening regulations and seizing illicit substances. 

“Large quantities of crystal meth and mandrax were removed from the streets. About 147.27 litres of liquor were confiscated from an unregistered dealer,” the police said. 

Furthermore, 16 fines were issued to outlets found to be non-compliant with the Liquor Act. High-priority visits were conducted at second-hand goods shops and firearm dealers to ensure strict adherence to the law.

​“These interprovincial operations are the cornerstone of the SAPS strategy to intensify the fight against cross-border crime. By synchronising efforts across provincial lines, SAPS aims to close the gaps utilised by syndicates and ensure a safer South Africa,” the police said. – SAnews.gov.za

Edwin

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Deputy President Mashatile to attend the South African Rugby Annual Awards in Cape Town

Source: President of South Africa –

Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile will tomorrow, Thursday 05 March 2026, attend and hand over awards at the South African Rugby Player of the Year Awards annual ceremony at the Cape Town International Convention Centre, Western Cape Province. 

The awards recognise and honour men and women in the 2025 Rugby season who demonstrated high-performance both on and off the field, rewarding players, coaches and clubs for their outstanding work throughout the season.

As a champion of social cohesion and nation building initiatives across the country, Deputy President Mashatile is expected to highlight the importance of sports, particularly Rugby, in building bridges among the different sectors of South African society and as one of the most symbolic sporting codes to unite South Africans around the National Team over the years as well as rugby’s role in cementing the country’s pole position as multiple Rugby World Cup Champions. 

Details of the event are as follows:

Date: Thursday, 05 March 2026
Time: 19h30 (Media to arrive at 18h30)
Venue: Cape Town International Convention Centre

For more information please contact Sindi Ximba (SARU) at Sindiswa.Ximba@sarugby.co.za or Sthembiso Sithole (The Presidency) on 078 356 4355.

Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to the Deputy President, on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Speech by Deputy Minister in The Presidency Nonceba Mhlauli (MP) at the National Council of Provinces Debate on International Women’s Day

Source: President of South Africa –

Theme: “Recentering Social Justice and Human Rights for Women and Girls”

Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces, Hon Refilwe Mtshweni-Tsipane
Deputy Chairperson of the NCOP, Hon Les Governder 
Chief Whip of the National Council of Provinces, Hon Kenneth Mmolemang
Presiding Officers
Honourable Members of the NCOP and provincial delegates present,

Let me start by passing our sincere condolences to the family, friends, comrades and former colleagues of our first chairperson of the NCOP, Mosiuoa lekota. We cannot speak of the South African democracy and the work of this multi-party Parliament without paying tribute to his selfless contribution. We thank him for his unwavering service to the people of South Africa. May his revolutionary soul rest in peace. 

Honourable Members, 

International Women’s Day was first observed in the early twentieth century. It was not born in ceremony, but born in struggle. It emerged from the marches of garment workers, the defiance campaigns, and the collective refusal by women across the world to accept their own erasure.

Over a century later, we gather in Parliaments, in community halls and in the streets not only to celebrate how far women have come, but to confront, with honesty, how far the world still must go.

The theme before us today, “Recentering social justice and human rights for women and girls,” is not a slogan. It is a diagnosis. It is an acknowledgement that the centre shifted. That progress, where it came, was uneven. That rights, where they were won, were not always protected. And that justice remains, for too many women and girls, a promise still deferred.

To recenter is to return, but it is also to interrogate. We must ask what displaced women and girls from the centre of our social justice agenda in the first place. The answer demands honesty.

It was the persistence of patriarchal systems that treat women’s rights as a concession rather than a constitutional imperative. It was the normalisation of violence as a private matter rather than a public emergency. It was the quiet tolerance of economic exclusion, the unpaid care burden, and the glass ceilings that keep women on the margins of opportunity and power.

Honourable Members,

Yes, policy and legal frameworks exist. They are in place through the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), adopted in 1979 by the UN General Assembly, the Beijing Platform for Action, the AU Agenda 2063 and our own South African Constitution. What has wavered is not the law, but the political will to enforce it, to fund it, and to live by it. 

The real test is not how well we can recite these conventions but whether a woman can walk home safely. Whether a survivor can access justice without being retraumatised. Whether a girl child can learn without fear. Whether a woman-owned enterprise can access markets, finance, and procurement without being blocked by old networks and gatekeeping.

Thirty years on, as the world marks Beijing+30, we are compelled to take stock with honesty. Progress has been made: maternal mortality has declined, girls’ enrolment in schools has improved, and women’s representation in legislatures has grown. But the progress is fragile, uneven, and in many parts of the world, it is reversing.

In fact, it would be amiss of me not to mention what a devastating time it has been for women in Sudan, The Democratic Republic of Congo, in Palestine and most recently the Middle East as well as in other regions of the world plagued by conflict. 

In these theatres of war and political upheaval, it is women and girls who bear the heaviest burden. They are displaced from their homes, stripped of access to education and healthcare, subjected to violence, and denied even the most basic forms of dignity. Conflict does not only destroy infrastructure. It erodes the social fabric that protects women. It turns their bodies into battlegrounds and their rights into collateral damage.

We must be unequivocal in our call for peace. Peace is not an abstract diplomatic ideal. It is the foundation upon which women are able to live safely, to participate economically, to raise families without fear, and to contribute meaningfully to society. Where there is no peace, there can be no justice for women. Where there is no stability, empowerment becomes an empty promise.

We therefore reiterates its principled position in support of peaceful resolution of conflicts, dialogue over destruction, and the protection of civilians, particularly women and children. We affirm that the empowerment of women must extend to every sphere of life political, social, and economic. Women must not only survive conflict; they must be included in peacebuilding, reconstruction, and governance processes. Sustainable peace is only possible when women are present at negotiation tables and in leadership structures shaping the future.Honorable Members 

In South Africa, International Women’s Day carries a particular weight and a particular promise. We placed gender equality at the heart of our democratic project as a founding principle. Our Constitution guarantees equality without qualification. Yet we remain confronted by the brutal reality of gender-based violence and femicide, the feminisation of poverty, and structural barriers that still deny dignity and opportunity to millions of women, particularly in rural and peri-urban communities.

Deputy Chairperson,

If we are serious about recentring social justice, then we must be equally serious about re-centering implementation. That is why the work of the Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities which we are presenting here today is not peripheral. It is structural. Its mandate is to drive mainstreaming, advocacy, monitoring and evaluation across government, so that women’s rights are not treated as a side programme, but as a standard in every plan, every budget, and every delivery outcome. 

This is also why our focus must be practical and measurable: focusing on prevention, protection, justice, and economic power.

First, on safety and justice. South Africa has built key parts of the survivor-support ecosystem, but access remains uneven and the system remains too slow for the urgency of the crisis. The Department of Justice’s Gender-Based Violence page makes it plain that survivor support includes the Gender-Based Violence Command Centre, a 24-hour call centre that can refer cases directly to SAPS and deploy social workers, including accessible channels for persons with disabilities. 

What matters now is scale, coordination and consequence. In April 2025, the Justice, Crime Prevention and Security Cluster convened an urgent special sitting in response to escalating GBVF, and adopted a 90-day acceleration programme to fast-track implementation of the National Strategic Plan on GBVF. That intervention is not only a statement. It includes concrete measures: revitalising and reconstituting the Inter-Ministerial Committee on GBVF under the 7th Administration, establishing a dedicated GBVF Priority Committee within NATJOINTS, revitalising provincial JCPS structures, integrating GBVF statistics across the value chain from arrest to incarceration, and accelerating the rollout of Thuthuzela Care Centres across all provinces. 

Honourable Members, this is what “recentering justice” looks like in practice: a criminal justice value chain that is aligned, time-bound, measurable, and survivor-centred.

And in November 2025, the National Disaster Management Centre took a further step by classifying Gender-Based Violence and Femicide as a national disaster in terms of the Disaster Management Act. This classification is a profound acknowledgement that GBVF is not only a social crisis. It is a national emergency that demands coordinated response, mobilisation of resources, and accountability at every sphere of government.

Second, on economic justice. A society cannot claim to advance women’s rights while women remain locked out of productive assets, procurement, and finance. South Africa has placed a clear stake in the ground through policies and programmes that target women’s economic inclusion. The State of the Nation 2026 address reflects that government has put a national policy in place to ensure that 40% of public procurement goes to women-owned businesses, and that thousands of women-owned enterprises have been trained to participate in procurement opportunities. It further notes that the IDC has earmarked significant funding to invest in women-led businesses, alongside commitments by other entities to support women-owned enterprises.

This matters because procurement is not a technical matter. It is a redistribution instrument. It is a lever for inclusion. It is the difference between women being beneficiaries and women being builders of the economy.

The Presidential Youth Employment Intervention (PYEI) which is multi-stakeholder programme dedicated at accelerating empowerment and development opportunities for young people. By the third quarter of the 2025/26 financial year, the PYEI facilitated nearly 295,000 earning opportunities for youth, most of which went to young women in particular. 

What we must do is upscale these efforts to ensure that women, particular young people are empowered in such a way that they do not fall prey to social ills which sets them up for a life of poverty and destitution. For us to do that honourable members, we must ALL be concerned with the status of women in our society. 

Deputy Chairperson,

This is where the National Council of Provinces has a decisive role. Recentring social justice is not achieved only through national declarations. It is achieved where people live. It is achieved through provincial implementation, local coordination, and budget alignment.

The NCOP must therefore use its constitutional mandate to ensure that provincial departments and municipalities do not treat women’s rights as an unfunded mandate. Oversight must ask direct questions: Are shelters funded and functional? Are police stations equipped to respond with dignity and speed? Are courts safe for survivors and witnesses, especially children? Are provinces participating in integrated GBVF reporting and case-flow management as required by the JCPS acceleration programme? Are procurement opportunities reaching women-owned enterprises outside major metros?

Honourable Members,

We must also speak plainly about the role of men and boys. We cannot build a future without confronting the socialisation that produces violence, entitlement and control. The justice system itself acknowledges programmes that focus on positively changing the attitudes of men and boys in areas with high levels of violence against women. This is not optional work. It is prevention.

To the boy child, we must say: your strength is not dominance. It is discipline. It is respect. It is accountability. It is the courage to reject peer pressure, to reject violence, and to protect the dignity of women and girls in your home, your school, your community, and online.

To fathers, brothers, coaches, faith leaders, traditional leaders and community leaders, we must say: silence is not neutrality. Silence is permission. If we are serious about ending GBVF, then positive masculinity must become a societal norm, not a campaign for 16 days.

Chairperson,

Our G20 Presidency last year provided an opportunity to elevate women’s empowerment in ways that are practical and globally relevant. The G20 Empowerment of Women Working Group Chairperson’s Statement of 31 October 2025 places the care economy and financial inclusion at the centre of women’s empowerment, and recognises the importance of shared social responsibility for caregiving, including encouraging the active engagement of men and boys in care work. It also frames women’s financial inclusion as a fundamental enabler of women’s economic empowerment and inclusive development. 

This is deeply aligned with our domestic reality: women carry disproportionate unpaid care burdens, and that burden is an economic constraint. If we want women to participate equally in the economy, we must invest in care infrastructure, remove barriers to women’s access to finance, and recognise that economic justice is a form of violence prevention.

Honourable Members,

This year also carries profound historical meaning. In 2026, we mark 70 years since the women’s march of 9 August 1956, when thousands of women, mothers, workers, organisers, and leaders marched to the Union Buildings to declare that they would not accept injustice. Their message is not only history. It is instruction. It tells us that courage is collective, and that rights are defended through action.

As we look to the year ahead, the call of this debate must be clear:
We must move from commemoration to implementation.
From promises to measurable outcomes.
From policy intent to lived reality.

We must strengthen access to justice, not only by improving laws, but by fixing the system: faster case processing, safer courts, better survivor support, integrated data, and accountable consequences for perpetrators. 

We must strengthen economic justice, not only by speaking about empowerment, but by opening procurement, expanding finance, building capability, and ensuring that women-owned enterprises can compete and win. 

We must strengthen prevention, not only by protecting women and girls, but by actively shaping the values of boys and men, and rebuilding communities that refuse violence as normal. 

And we must do so together: national government, provinces, municipalities, civil society, business, labour, communities and households.

When South Africa says we are “recentering social justice and human rights for women and girls,” we are making a declaration about the kind of country we choose to be. A country where safety is not luck. Where justice is not delayed. Where economic participation is not gatekept. Where dignity is not negotiable.

Let this House, and the society we represent, leave this debate with one shared commitment: that justice for women and girls will no longer be a deferred promise, but a lived reality.

I thank you.
 

Deputy President Mashatile to brief the NCOP on efforts to combat acts of corruption in the SAPS and illegal mining in Gauteng's East and West Rand

Source: President of South Africa –

Deputy President Shipokosa Paulus Mashatile will on Thursday, 05 March 2026, respond to Questions for Oral Reply in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) in Parliament, Cape Town.

In his capacity as Chairperson of the Justice, Crime Prevention and Security (JCPS) Cabinet Committee and Leader of Government Business in Parliament, the Deputy President will address a range of critical governance and service delivery matters affecting provinces and municipalities across the country.

Among the key matters to be addressed, the Deputy President will update Members on Government strategies to prevent corruption in the South African Police Service (SAPS) and outline corrective measures implemented by the JCPS Cluster to detect and prevent corruption within SAPS and the criminal justice system as a whole.

Deputy President Mashatile will reaffirm Government’s commitment to safeguarding the integrity of the criminal justice system and ensuring that corruption within law enforcement agencies is decisively rooted out.

The Deputy President will also respond to questions regarding the escalation of illegal mining activities in Gauteng’s East and West Rand areas, including in the underlying informal settlements.

Government remains resolute in restoring order, protecting communities, and dismantling organised criminal networks that undermine economic stability and public safety.

Other matters for Oral Reply by Deputy President Mashatile include the decline and restoration of the national rail transport system; the state of distressed and dysfunctional municipalities; as well as measures to address the national water crisis and incomplete infrastructure projects.

Details of the sitting are as follows:

Date: Thursday, 05 March 2026
Time: 14h00
Venue: NCOP Chamber, Parliament, Cape Town

The Q&A Session will be streamed live on the Parliamentary Channel 408 and Parliamentary YouTube channel.

For more information please contact Sam Bopape on 082 318 5251.

Media enquiries: Mr Keith Khoza, Acting Spokesperson to the Deputy President, on 066 195 8840

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

Morolong engages North West provincial government 

Source: Government of South Africa

Morolong engages North West provincial government 

Deputy Minister in the Presidency Kenny Morolong, responsible for the Government Communication and Information System (GCIS) on Wednesday engaged with members of the North West provincial government where he emphasised the importance of government communications to the public.

The GCIS provides strategic communication leadership and support in government communications to all of government. It further leads government communication through the submission of a National Communication Strategy to Cabinet.

“Your responsibility as the provincial government is to implement the national policy,” Morolong said.

In his remarks to Members of the Executive Council (MECs), Morolong said Cabinet recently resolved on the review of the Government Communication Policy.

“I am here to socialise the Government Communication Policy with provincial government executives,” he said.
Morolong said in carrying out its responsibilities, the GCIS is working with the Media Development and Diversity Agency (MDDA) and Brand South Africa (Brand SA).

He explained that the MDDA helps to create an enabling environment for media development and diversity that is conducive to public discourse and which reflects the needs and aspirations of all South Africans.

The MDDA, as part of its responsibilities, promotes media development and diversity by providing support primarily to community and small commercial media projects.

“Brand SA’s mandate is to make sure that South Africa is globally competitive and that it is an admired brand internationally.”

Brand SA is South Africa’s official marketing agency appointed to promote the country’s reputation.

The primary objective of Brand South Africa is to develop and implement proactive marketing and communication strategies for South Africa, with and through stakeholders, to promote South Africa’s competitiveness and attractiveness to both domestic and international audiences.

Following a closed session with the Deputy Minister, North West Premier Lazarus Mokgosi said part of the discussions were around how to “position communications in the three spheres of government at the centre of communicating to the people”.

“Our responsibility as government is to tell people what government does,” Mokgosi said, emphasising the need for the community media to be supported.

“Departments must report on progress on how are they supporting the local media. We are going to up the game in supporting the local media, we have a responsibility as a province to support local media,” he said.

Sandile Nene, the Acting Deputy Director-General for Content Processing and Dissemination at the GCIS spoke on the Government Communication Policy and the establishment of a Task Group on Government Communications in 1995 by the then Deputy President Thabo Mbeki. 

He explained how the GCIS was established while also unpacking to the executives the importance of communicating government messages to the public as this plays a role in improving people’s lives.

“People need to know where to go for government services,” he said. 

Morolong was accompanied by GCIS senior officials, MDDA and Brand SA officials. The Deputy Minister’s day concluded by a visit to Mmabatho FM were he engaged with the listeners. – SAnews.gov.za

 

Edwin

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