Gauteng strengthens enforcement of road safety regulations

Source: Government of South Africa

Gauteng strengthens enforcement of road safety regulations

The Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport says it is ramping up road safety interventions through stronger enforcement of existing legislation, adoption of technology and stricter compliance with the National Road Traffic Act (NRTA) and National Land Transport Act (NLTA).

This comes after 12 learners died while they were being transported to school in a Toyota Quantum on Monday morning when the vehicle collided with a truck in Vanderbijlpark in the Vaal, Gauteng.

“We will not compromise when it comes to the safety of our children. Any scholar transport operator who puts learners at risk will face serious consequences,” MEC for Roads and Transport Kedibone Diale-Tlabela said on Tuesday. 

As Gauteng’s road traffic law and safety authority, the department is building its internal legal capacity and creating an updated online repository of road traffic regulations, so road users know their rights and responsibilities.

“Road safety is a shared responsibility. Government will enforce the laws; however parents, operators, drivers, and pedestrians must also play their part in ensuring that everyone is safe and arrives alive,” Diale-Tlabela said.

Government has encouraged parents, learners and motorists to report reckless driving, unsafe behaviour, and unroadworthy scholar transport vehicles through lawful channels (012 999 5407/086 140 0800). 

Where feasible and safe, video evidence may assist authorities identify non-compliant operators and drivers. 

The department further encouraged operators and parents to have dashboard cameras installed for real-time monitoring.

In line with the department’s road safety campaign, it will strictly enforce Section 49 of the National Road Traffic Act (NRTA) which places a statutory duty on the operator of a motor vehicle to ensure:

  • The vehicle is roadworthy and mechanically safe.
  • The driver operates the vehicle lawfully and safely.
  • Passengers are transported without endangerment.
  • Safe loading and unloading of passengers.

The campaign forms part of the province’s contribution to the national department’s 365 Day Road Safety and Arrive Alive programmes.

Enforcement consequences are now correctly framed as:

  • Enforcement actions under the NRTA.
  • Potential suspension or loss of operator status based on NRTA non-compliance.

The department further reaffirms key NRTA regulations governing pedestrian behaviour:

  • Regulation 323(2): Pedestrians are prohibited from entering or walking on freeways, except where permitted by law.
  • Regulation 315: Pedestrians must cross at designated points and obey road traffic signs and signals. 
  • Regulation 316(5): This regulation addresses unlawful and dangerous pedestrian behaviour, including jaywalking. – SAnews.gov.za

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Remarks by Deputy Minister in The Presidency, Nonceba Mhlauli, on the occasion of the Statistics South Africa Integrated Business Planning Session, Kopanong Conference Centre

Source: President of South Africa –

Statistician General, Risenga Maluleke,
Leadership of Statistics South Africa,
Colleagues,

As we begin a new year and prepare for the new financial cycle ahead, I would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your families a productive, healthy, and successful year. May 2026 be a year of clarity, impact, and renewed purpose in the important work that you do.

I am honoured to join you today as you finalise your preparations and plans for the new financial year, commencing in April. These planning sessions are critical moments where reflection meets foresight, and where evidence is translated into action.

As we begin this planning cycle, it is important to situate our work within the broader policy architecture of Government. All our plans, programmes, and priorities are anchored in the Medium-Term Development Plan, the MTDP, which serves as the central strategic framework guiding the work of the 7th Administration.

The MTDP is not an abstract policy instrument. It is a practical roadmap that translates electoral mandates into measurable outcomes, sets national priorities, and provides the basis for accountability across Government. It is therefore essential that the Integrated Business Planning of Statistics South Africa is fully aligned to the MTDP, ensuring that the data we produce directly supports national planning, monitoring, and evaluation.

In this regard, Statistics South Africa occupies a unique and indispensable position. The MTDP relies on credible, timely, and high-quality statistics to track progress, identify risks early, and enable corrective action where implementation falls short. Without reliable data, the MTDP cannot succeed, and without Stats SA, evidence-led governance cannot be realised.

The importance of Statistics South Africa cannot be overstated. Every sector of our economy and society relies on credible, scientific evidence to create clarity and enable informed, responsible decision-making. In many respects, the work you do forms the backbone of effective governance, economic planning, and social development.

We are living in profoundly VUCA times. Volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity define our global and national context. The pace of change is relentless, risks are increasingly interconnected, and shocks are no longer isolated events. The Global Risks Report released this week by the World Economic Forum reminds us that climate instability, geopolitical tensions, economic fragility, technological disruption, and misinformation are converging in ways that continue to test institutions and leadership worldwide.

In such an environment, now more than ever, decision-making must be anchored in scientific, informed, and credible data. Intuition alone is no longer sufficient. Opinion is no substitute for evidence. Policy, planning, and investment choices that are not data-driven risk being ineffective at best and harmful at worst.

In a world overflowing with information and changing daily, it is you, the statisticians, data scientists, analysts, administrators, and researchers, who transform complexity into understanding and uncertainty into direction.

Statistics is not simply about numbers. It is the language of progress. It is the foundation of accountability. It is the compass that guides industries, institutions, and communities toward better choices. Every dataset you clean, every model you test, every trend you uncover contributes to something far greater than a report or a spreadsheet. It contributes to trust, something our country needs now more than ever.

It is this trust that gives Statistics South Africa a competitive and strategic advantage within the broader data ecosystem. This is an important position to hold and one that comes with both responsibility and influence.

We live in an era where evidence must compete with opinion, where misinformation spreads faster than insight, and where narratives can overshadow facts. Yet time and again, your work lights the path forward. You help government allocate resources more fairly and competently. You help us plan for a more resilient future. You enable businesses to innovate more intelligently. You support academic institutions in re-skilling the next generation of leaders. Ultimately, you help society understand itself accurately, honestly, and with precision.

But our work is far from finished.

The realities we face today demand even more from us. Global and national climate patterns are shifting dramatically. We see this clearly in the recent flooding in Limpopo and Mpumalanga, where lives have tragically been lost. At the same time, we continue to grapple with persistent challenges such as the school placement crisis, where many children remain without access to education despite the availability of data that should guide effective planning and early intervention.

SG Maluleke and fellow colleagues, while we celebrate the critical role that Statistics South Africa plays, we must also speak honestly about the challenges that continue to surface in Parliament and oversight forums.

Members of Parliament have consistently raised concerns regarding the vacancy rate within Statistics South Africa. Capacity constraints, particularly in specialised and technical areas, place real pressure on the institution’s ability to deliver on its expanding mandate. A strong statistical system requires skilled people, institutional memory, and stability.

Funding constraints have also been a recurring issue. Parliament has repeatedly emphasised that the sustainability of the national statistical system cannot be taken for granted. Underfunding does not only affect outputs. It affects data quality, innovation, responsiveness, and the ability of Stats SA to keep pace with emerging demands such as big data, predictive analytics, and integrated data systems.

In addition, the implementation of the Statistics Amendment Act remains a matter of keen interest to Parliament. The Act strengthens the coordination of official statistics across the state and reinforces the authority of the Statistician-General. Effective implementation is therefore essential to reduce duplication, improve coherence, and build a truly integrated national statistical system.

These are not criticisms for their own sake. They are signals from Parliament that Statistics South Africa matters, that expectations are high, and that the institution is seen as a cornerstone of a capable and developmental state.

As the Executive, we take these matters seriously. Addressing capacity, funding sustainability, and legislative implementation is not optional. It is fundamental to ensuring that Stats SA can continue to serve Cabinet, Parliament, and the people of South Africa with credibility and excellence.

Colleagues, the priorities of the 7th Administration are clear and deliberate. Cabinet has committed itself to accelerating inclusive economic growth, reducing poverty and inequality, strengthening state capability, improving service delivery, and restoring public trust in institutions.

Central to these priorities is the ability of the State to plan effectively, allocate resources strategically, and measure impact honestly. This is where Statistics South Africa becomes a strategic partner to Cabinet, not merely a technical institution.

Whether we are focusing on employment creation, infrastructure development, social protection, education outcomes, health systems, or spatial inequality, Cabinet decisions are only as good as the data that informs them. Stats SA provides the evidence base that allows Cabinet to prioritise correctly, intervene decisively, and assess whether policy choices are delivering real change in people’s lives.

As the 7th Administration intensifies its focus on implementation, impact, and accountability, the demand for high-quality, disaggregated, and timely data will only grow. Your work is therefore not peripheral to the Cabinet agenda. It is central to it.

This raises important questions for all of us.

What is the role of Statistics South Africa in ensuring that data does not simply exist, but meaningfully informs planning and decision-making? Should we, as a country, be leveraging our statistical capabilities more assertively in predictive analytics and scenario planning to anticipate risks, allocate resources proactively, and strengthen long-term resilience?

As technology accelerates, as challenges become more interconnected, and as citizens rightly demand transparency and accountability, the role of the statistics community becomes not just relevant but indispensable.

We must continue to push boundaries.
We must strengthen ethical standards.
We must embrace innovation.
And we must deliberately cultivate the next generation of experts who will carry this mission forward.

Let us be creative.
Let us innovate boldly.
Let us be relentless in our pursuit of truth.
And let us serve the citizens of this country with respect, integrity, and excellence.
When data is respected, democracy is strengthened.

When decisions are informed, lives are improved.

You are not merely working with numbers. You are shaping the future of this country.

Every insight you produce is a building block toward a more just, more strategic, and more resilient South Africa.

I wish you every success in the year ahead.

Thank you for the work you do.
Thank you for your excellence.
And thank you for your unwavering commitment to truth.

Your industry matters.
Your contribution matters.
And your future has never been more important.

I thank you.

Investment in science, technology and innovation key to development

Source: Government of South Africa

Investment in science, technology and innovation key to development

No country can expect to reach its development goals without investing in its science, technology and innovation (STI) capabilities. 

This is according to the Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Professor Blade Nzimande, during his speech at this year’s Basic Education Sector Lekgotla, which began today in Benoni, Gauteng.

“As part of enhancing our country’s ability to respond to our historical and contemporary challenges, over the past three decades, we have made significant investments with the view of strengthening our country’s STI capabilities.” 

He told delegates that South Africa possesses the largest public science system in Africa, which is backed by institutions such as the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC), the National Research Foundation (NRF), and the South African National Space Agency (SANSA).

He said the country hosts two of the world’s largest scientific instruments – the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) and the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) – noting that the SKA has also been used to support maths and science education in rural areas such as Carnarvon in the Northern Cape.

The Minister also highlighted the Nuclear Medicine Research Infrastructure (NuMeRI) facility at Steve Biko Hospital, which supports drug development, clinical research and advanced diagnostics for diseases including cancer and tuberculosis.

“Why am I sharing all this with you? To make the point that one of the reasons why our country is an emerging global leader in the science domains I have mentioned is because of the basic training in maths and science that our young people receive through our public education system.” 

The Minister emphasised the importance of establishing a future-proof education system, especially as the world navigates one of the most unpredictable periods in human history.

He stated that this is marked by armed conflicts, the threat of pandemics, economic and digital inequality, climate change, biodiversity loss, disruptive technologies, and an increasing threat to multilateralism.

“All these challenges have made the future of humanity increasingly uncertain and have forced us to rethink not only the kind of economic systems we would need to build a shared future for humanity, but also what kind of knowledge and skills we would need to realise such a future.” 

In response, he stated that the country’s Decadal Plan for Science, Technology, and Innovation (2022-2032) promotes a future-ready education.

“By this, we do not mean the kind of education that only anticipates the future, but also one that shapes it.”

He believes that education should emphasise digital and future skills for young people, particularly in emerging fields such as artificial intelligence, robotics, biotechnology, and the creation of digital solutions.

“Equally important is the need to complement classroom-based instruction with extracurricular activities that stretch their minds and provide learners with a platform to put into practice the core scientific principles from the classroom in problem-solving scenarios.”

The department is rolling out several initiatives aimed at future-proofing education by equipping learners with digital and future skills, the Minister said.

These include support for STEM Olympiads that allow learners to engage directly with science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), while building analytical and problem-solving skills. 

At the national level, the programmes are led by the South African Mathematics Foundation and the Eskom Expo, which run initiatives such as the South African Maths Olympiad and the International Science Fair.

The Minister said the department would continue supporting these efforts, with a growing focus on grassroots coaching and mentoring, as well as introducing maths and science at the early childhood development level to address long-standing fears around these subjects.

He cited concerns raised by Basic Education Minister Siviwe Gwarube that only 34% of 2025 matric candidates wrote mathematics, and highlighted practical interventions, including support to a KwaZulu-Natal primary school whose learners recently placed second in a coding and robotics competition. 

He also raised the possibility of a special programme to help underperforming matric learners obtain their certificates and prepare for further study.

“I believe that as government and as a country, we must demonstrate a greater appreciation for the role and contribution of our educators.” – SAnews.gov.za

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Public called to share ideas for 2026 Budget

Source: Government of South Africa

Public called to share ideas for 2026 Budget

The Minister of Finance, Enoch Godongwana, has encouraged South Africans to share their suggestions on the 2026 Budget. 

The National Budget seeks to maintain a balance between South Africa’s fiscal framework, fund the priorities of the seventh administration, while mitigating the funding requirements impact on the poor and the middle-income household.

It aims to strike a balance between growing the economy and supporting the vulnerable amid limited resources. 

The Minister will deliver the National Budget Speech on 25 February 2026, where he will outline all the financial, economic and social commitments government will prioritise in its planned expenditure.

People may submit views on government spending priorities; addressing a large budget deficit; stabilising State-owned entity finances; energy and water investments; tax policies; debt sustainability; municipal finances and any other economy-related topics.

“Minister Godongwana looks forward to your contributions,” National Treasury said on Tuesday.

Submissions can be sent to National Treasury using this link for Budget Tips: https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=jzRFGrQCmk-nqHeG9t0yRTqZ86WzI7JHvRvFVz0vJUhUM1FHWEc0MU1GWjc0RFhHQTNZVEQwM0Y5RS4u&route=shorturl.

The public is advised to keep contributions concise and to the point, not longer than 300 words. –SAnews.gov.za

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Public office bearers’ salaries to increase

Source: Government of South Africa

Public office bearers’ salaries to increase

President Cyril Ramaphosa has determined to increase the salaries of public office bearers by between  3.8% and 4.1% in different categories.

This after the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers recommended a salary increment of some 4.1% for all public office bearers.

“The increase of 4.1% applies to judges, magistrates, traditional leaders and members of independent constitutional institutions.

“The increase of 3.8% applies to Members of the National Executive, Members of Parliament, members of provincial executive councils and members of provincial legislatures,” the Presidency said.

The increases will take effect from 1 April 2025.

The Presidency explained that in arriving at its decision, the Independent Commission is required, in terms of section 8(6) of the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers Act, 1997, to consider:

  • The role, status, duties, functions and responsibilities of the office bearers concerned.
  • Affordability of different levels of remuneration of public office bearers.
  • Current principles and levels of remuneration, particularly in respect of organs of State.
  • Inflation.
  • Available resources of the State.
  • Public service remuneration levels.

“The Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers is mandated in terms of section 219(1), (2) and (5) of the Constitution, read with section 8(4) of the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers Act, 1997 (Act No. 92 of 1997), to make annual recommendations relating to the salaries and/or the upper limits of the salaries, allowances, and benefits of the public office-bearers.

“President Ramaphosa appreciates the diligence and integrity with which the Commission developed its recommendations,” the Presidency said. – SAnews.gov.za

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Justice Department confirms fatal shooting at Booysens Court

Source: Government of South Africa

Justice Department confirms fatal shooting at Booysens Court

The Justice and Constitutional Development department has confirmed a fatal shooting incident at the Booysens Magistrates’ Court in Gauteng on Tuesday.

The incident is the latest in a growing trend of violence at judicial facilities, with similar incidents occurring at the Athlone, Mitchells Plain and Wynberg Magistrates Courts in the Western Cape and another incident at Melmoth Court in KwaZulu-Natal – all in the span of last year.

“The Ministry of Justice and Constitutional Development has learnt with serious concern of [the] shooting incident.

“The incident is still active, and law enforcement agencies are attending to the situation. At this stage, it has been reported that five people were shot, with two fatalities,” a department statement said.

Deputy Minister Andries Nel is expected to “proceed to the scene to assess the situation, while the Ministry is awaiting further verified details from law enforcement agencies and court management”.

“The Ministry will provide updates as more information becomes available.

“The Ministry condemns this incident and will work with the relevant security and law enforcement authorities to ensure that all necessary measures are implemented to safeguard court users and personnel,” the statement read. – SAnews.gov.za

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R20 million emergency relief allocated to tackle Knysna water crisis

Source: Government of South Africa

R20 million emergency relief allocated to tackle Knysna water crisis

Water and Sanitation Minister Pemmy Majodina has announced an emergency relief allocation of R20 million to the Knysna Municipality, as part of urgent interventions to address the town’s deepening water crisis.

Majodina announced the allocation following a two-day working visit to the Garden Route District Municipality in the Western Cape, to assess the status of water challenges.

Majodina said the funding, drawn from reprioritised water services infrastructure grants, will be used alongside technical support from the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) to develop groundwater resources and ease pressure on Knysna’s strained surface water system.

Knysna’s water supply system is currently facing critical water shortages due to a severe localised drought affecting the Garden Route belt in the Western Cape.

The municipality’s primary water storage facility, the Akkerkloof Dam, is currently sitting at approximately 16% capacity, translating to an estimated 13 days of water at current consumption levels. The situation has been worsened by years of inadequate maintenance of water infrastructure, high non-revenue water losses and ongoing vandalism.

During her two-day visit on 17-18 January 2026, Majodina, accompanied by Knysna Executive Mayor Thando Matika and technical teams from both the municipality and DWS, conducted inspections at key water infrastructure sites. These included the Akkerkloof Dam, the Karatara River and several boreholes, to assess their potential for revival and additional yield.

While the low levels at Akkerkloof Dam have brought the crisis into sharp focus, technical assessments revealed that Knysna’s water challenges date back to at least 2023.

According to DWS, sufficient water resources could meet the town’s needs if leaks in the municipal distribution network were reduced and per capita consumption lowered. However, long-standing neglect of infrastructure asset management has left the system vulnerable.

Majodina supported the municipality’s decision to classify Knysna as a disaster area, noting that the request to the Western Cape Provincial Government to also declare Knysna a disaster area, will allow government to reprioritise resources and personnel from various sectors to address the situation.

“It will also assist government to have a co-ordinated and comprehensive approach and response to the water crisis,” the Minister said.

The department is also providing technical engineering expertise to assess the refurbishment requirements of the Knysna Desalination Plant, with the aim of increasing water supply.

The department is further assisting the Knysna Municipality to strengthen its water resources planning and has funded feasibility studies for a new small local dam to meet its longer-term demand.

The Minister urged the municipality to urgently develop a plan to tackle water leaks and install functioning water meters, which are major contributors to the high non-water revenue.

She also encouraged the exploration of alternative water sources, including groundwater, seawater desalination and water reuse, to reduce reliance on surface water.

The Minister highlighted that the department has previously provided support to the Knysna Municipality to assist with refurbishment and upgrading of some of its water supply infrastructure.

“The department allocated R12.4 million and R7 million during the 23/24-24/25 and 25/26 financial years respectively, through its Water Services Infrastructure Grant (WSIG), for the rehabilitation of existing water networks and for water conservation and demand management,” the Minister said.

During an engagement with the Knysna Business Chamber, Majodina commended the sector’s commitment to be part of the structures set up to solve the water challenges facing the tourist town.

The Knysna Business Chamber pledged to assist through mobilising its retired technical experts to contribute to resolving the water crisis.

Matika welcomed the department’s intervention and commitment demonstrated by the Minister in availing special emergency relief funding and technical support to address the municipality’s water challenges.

The mayor said the Minister’s hands-on engagement, together with the Department’s immediate, medium- and long-term interventions, complemented by provincial support, signals a strong, coordinated, and collaborative approach across all spheres of government to ensure water security for the Greater Knysna area.

“We further acknowledge and value the ongoing support and cooperation from both the Western Cape Department of Local Government and the National Department of Water and Sanitation, whose involvement strengthens the collective response to the current water crisis. This partnership demonstrates government’s shared responsibility to protect communities, sustain economic activity, and build a more resilient and sustainable water future for Knysna,” Matika said.

The department said it will continue to work closely with the municipality, provincial authorities and other stakeholders, and will provide regular updates to residents as interventions are implemented. – SAnews.gov.za
 

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President Ramaphosa determines salary increment for public office-bearers

Source: President of South Africa –

President Cyril Ramaphosa has made a determination to increase, with effect 1 April 2025, the salary of public office-bearers.

The Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers recommended 4.1% salary increment for all public office bearers.

Having considered the Commission’s recommendations and its impact on the fiscus, the President, however, decided to increase the salary of public office-bearers by 4.1% and 3.8% in different categories.

The increase of 4.1% applies to judges, magistrates, traditional leaders and members of independent constitutional institutions.

The increase of 3.8% applies to Members of the National Executive, Members of Parliament, members of provincial executive councils and members of provincial legislatures.

President Ramaphosa’s determination follows his consideration of recommendations by the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers.

The Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers is mandated in terms of section 219(1), (2) and (5) of the Constitution, read with section 8(4) of the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers Act, 1997 (Act No. 92 of 1997), to make annual recommendations relating to the salaries and/or the upper limits of the salaries, allowances, and benefits of the public office-bearers.

In arriving at its decision, the Independent Commission is required in terms of section 8(6) of the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers Act, 1997, to consider the following:

– The role, status, duties, functions and responsibilities of the office-bearers concerned;

– Affordability of different levels of remuneration of public office-bearers;

– Current principles and levels of remuneration, particularly in respect of organs of state;

– Inflation;

– Available resources of the State; and

– Public Service remuneration levels.

President Ramaphosa appreciates the diligence and integrity with which the Commission developed its recommendations.

Media enquiries: Vincent Magwenya, Spokesperson to the President – media@presidency.gov.za

Issued by: The Presidency
Pretoria

President calls for joint sitting of Parliament to deliver SONA 2026

Source: Government of South Africa

President calls for joint sitting of Parliament to deliver SONA 2026

President Cyril Ramaphosa has called a joint sitting of the National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces to deliver the 2026 State of the Nation Address (SONA) on Thursday, 12 February 2026.

“The President has called the joint sitting in accordance with Section 84(2)(d) of the Constitution and Rule 13(1)(a) of the Joint Rules of Parliament. The Constitution provides that the President may summon the National Assembly, the National Council of Provinces, or Parliament to an extraordinary sitting to conduct special business,” the Parliament said.

During the sitting, which will be held at the Cape Town City Hall, the President will highlight achievements of the administration, flag challenges, and outline interventions for the coming financial year.

SONA marks the official opening of the annual Parliamentary programme and sets out the government’s key policy priorities for the year ahead.

SONA 2026 will be broadcast live at 19:00 on Parliament TV on DSTV Channel 408 and on Parliament’s YouTube Channel. – SAnews.gov.za
 

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Justice department working to ensure re-opening of flood affected courts

Source: Government of South Africa

Justice department working to ensure re-opening of flood affected courts

The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development says it is working with stakeholders to ensure the speedy re-opening of courts affected by flooding in KwaZulu-Natal and Limpopo.

The two provinces, Limpopo in particular, have been battered by rain for the past week, resulting in loss of life and damage to property and infrastructure.

“The damages that occurred include roof leaks at the courts, electricity supply outage, structural damage and inability to access to the courts by both the public and staff due to access bridges that have been washed away.

“The Minister has already engaged with the Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure, as well as other stakeholders to speedily mitigate the challenges encountered. Members of the public will be kept abreast of all the developments in this regard and the temporary arrangements that are being made in the interim,” the department said in a statement.

The majority of courts have not been affected by the flooding.

“The department reiterates its commitment of providing access to justice services and will continue to work with stakeholders to speedily restore services at the affected courts,” the department said. – SAnews.gov.za

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